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Is the Audi RS6 finally meeting its match? The Genesis G90 Wingback Concept just dropped, and it’s not just another "luxury appliance." We’re talking a wide-body, long-roof shooting brake that puts the "soul" back in "Seoul."
The big question: Will Genesis actually build it, or is this just a beautiful teaser before they force us into another electric SUV? 🔌🚫
We’re breaking down why this 400+ HP "Hopefully" wagon might be the best deal in performance wagons—especially with a 10-year warranty that makes the German brands sweat.
Usually, when someone asks “What is that?” about a Genesis, they’re squinting at the badge trying to figure out if it’s some Bentley or a very ambitious Hyundai thing. Let’s be honest: while Genesis makes handsome-ish cars, they haven’t always had that “grab you by the throat” presence of the German titans. Meanwhile, BMW seems to be conducting a public experiment on how many nostrils you can fit on a grille before people stop paying six figures for a badge.

Then came the G90 Wingback concept. It landing like a thunderclap in a sea of gray, suburban crossover appliances. It’s got a hood long enough to have its own zip code, muscular hips, and a wagon silhouette that looks like it was penned by a rebel designer who isn’t afraid of a “Fleet Sales” manager’s heart attack. It doesn’t just look good; it looks expensive.
The Billion-Dollar Question: Will it actually arrive looking like this? Or will it show up three years late, watered down by safety regulations and “production realities,” looking like a G80 that had a mild allergic reaction? History says concepts get neutered. But Genesis has been on a tear lately, pushing bold designs into showrooms with surprising fidelity. Cross your fingers; if this gets “civilized,” it’s just another missed opportunity.

The modern performance wagon conversation begins and ends with the Audi RS6 Avant. It’s the car enthusiasts claim they’d buy if they won the lottery (and then they go buy a Urus or SQ8 anyway).
Even after the initial depreciation hit, you’re looking at an $80,000 used car with a ticking “German Repair Bill” time bomb under the hood. That is why the Wingback is so intoxicating. The idea of an RS6-shaming silhouette at roughly half the price is how a poster car becomes a driveway reality. Even if it falls short in Hot V – V8 some decent performance, good looks and a lofty lower cost is very attractive for a viable alternative.

Genesis has the hardware; they just need the guts to use it. The current 3.5L twin-turbo V6 is a gem, but at 375 hp, it’s a luxury cruiser, not a predator.
The real secret weapon? Hyundai’s N Division. If Genesis lets the mad scientists who built the Ioniq 5 N and the Elantra N loose on the Wingback, things get interesting. We’re talking:

If they can hit a $70,000 – $75,000 price point, they aren’t just competing with wagons; they are sniping customers from the BMW X5 and Porsche Macan. Data shows this would likely be higher in a performance version but a Base in those numbers with decent performance could still be a great option for a cool wagon if it isnt too watered down. If pricing creeps too high over $100,000 it would have to be really special to take on the RS6.
There is a looming threat: Genesis might turn this into a “Silent Assassin” EV.
On paper, a 600-hp electric wagon sounds great. In reality? It risks weighing as much as a small planet and driving like a refrigerator bolted to a motorized skateboard. We don’t need another 5,500-lb appliance that does 0–60 in 3 seconds but has the soul of a microwave.

A real performance wagon needs drama. It needs the mechanical growl, the feedback through the wheel, and the feeling that it’s alive. If Genesis builds a “tech-forward” EV Wingback, they might win the spec-sheet war but lose the enthusiast’s heart.
The Wingback is a gamble, but the market is already drowning in “safe” choices. The world doesn’t need another soulless transportation pod.
Genesis has a practical ace up their sleeve that the Germans can’t touch: The 10-year/100,000-mile warranty. Imagine owning a 450-hp, wide-body wagon and actually sleeping at night knowing the powertrain is covered. That’s a level of confidence Audi and BMW haven’t felt in decades.
If Genesis keeps the styling sharp, keeps the internal combustion soul intact, and keeps the price human, the Wingback won’t just be a killer—it’ll be a legend.

And if they don’t? Well, at least that orange Magma supercar concept they showed looks like it belongs on a bedroom wall.
(rumor has it, the Magma concept was built on a C8 corvette) :GM motor authority
| Feature | Audi RS6 Avant (The Icon) | Genesis G90 Wingback (The Disruptor) |
| Engine | 4.0L Twin-Turbo V8 | 3.5L Twin-Turbo V6 |
| Horsepower | 621 HP | 409 – 450 HP (Projected) |
| Torque | 627 lb-ft | 405+ lb-ft |
| 0–60 MPH | 3.2 Seconds | ~4.2 Seconds |
| Drivetrain | Quattro AWD | AWD with N-Tuned Differential |
| Wheels | 21″ or 22″ 5-Y-Spoke | 22″ Magma Signature Forged |
| Warranty | 4 Yrs / 50k Miles | 10 Yrs / 100k Miles |
| Vibe | “I’ve made it and I’m in a hurry.” | “I know something you don’t.” |
| Est. Price | $133,000+ | $75,000 – $85,000 (The Sweet Spot) |
Actually, BMW is officially back in the US wagon game for 2025. After years of leaving enthusiasts in the lurch, they finally brought over the heavy hitter to challenge the RS6.
Here is the current “State of the Wagon” in the USA as of 2025/2026:

Yes, BMW finally caved. The 2025 BMW M5 Touring is now available in the U.S. It’s the first time in over a decade that an M-badged wagon has touched our shores.
Mercedes hasn’t given up on the long-roof, but they’ve split their strategy:

Volvo is the last brand making “sensible” wagons, though they are leaning hard into the “Cross Country” (lifted) look:

If you have RS6 money, Porsche offers the only electric and high-end alternatives:

The market is currently split into two extremes:
Your Genesis Wingback “RS6 Killer” fits squarely into what I’d call the Missing Middle—a space that barely exists right now. There’s currently no one building a low-slung, aggressive, purely performance-oriented wagon in the $70,000 range. The market jumps from sensible crossovers straight to $130,000–$140,000 hybrid hyper-wagons with more complexity than a NASA launch sequence. If Genesis actually lands this car in that middle ground, they wouldn’t just be fighting the RS6—they’d be owning a segment the Germans have effectively abandoned.
But that’s the key: price discipline. If Genesis drifts upward and plants this thing deep inside the German-dominated $100k+ wagon territory, the value argument evaporates. Once it becomes a choice based on preference rather than dollars, the Genesis becomes a much harder sell. Audi, BMW, and Mercedes carry legacy, motorsport history, resale gravity, and brand clout that Genesis is still building. In that arena, it’s no longer the clever disruptor—it’s the newcomer asking to be compared to the champion.
Would you buy it?
Would you consider it?
Or is the RS6 still untouchable in the limited wagon world?
Head over to the Speed-Luxury Facebook page and drop your verdict.
Let’s hear it. https://www.facebook.com/speedluxury