Home » The Funky Kia K4 EX Is A Whole Lot Of Car For $25,165: Sensible Car Review

The Funky Kia K4 EX Is A Whole Lot Of Car For $25,165: Sensible Car Review

Kia K4 Review Ts2
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According to industry analysts Cox Automotive, the average new vehicle transaction price in November stood at a whopping $49,740. Yikes. While that sort of money gets you a nicer car than ever before, many of us simply don’t have that sort of cash to splash. Even among those of us who might, lots of us don’t want to wear a four-figure car payment around our necks, but you know how they say a rising tide lifts all ships? If you set a price cap of roughly half the average new car price, you can still find new cars that seem to offer rather compelling value. Take the Kia K4 EX, with its price tag of $25,165, for example.

This replacement for the Forte compact sedan isn’t a base model, it’s actually two steps up from the LX, which doesn’t even get a split-folding rear seat. That’s right, you can still buy a mid-range compact car for around $25,000, and thanks to industry-wide advancements in tech, toys, materials, and refinement, it’s a lot nicer than you’d expect. But can it handle more than a foot of snow? Let’s find out.

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[Full disclosure: Kia Canada let me borrow this K4 for a week so long as I kept the shiny side up, returned it with a full tank, and reviewed it.]

The Basics

Engine: Two-liter naturally aspirated twin-cam inline-four, multiport fuel injection.

Transmission: Continuously variable transmission, open differential.

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Drive: Front-wheel-drive.

Output: 147 horsepower at 6,200 rpm, 132 lb.-ft. of torque at 4,500 rpm.

Fuel economy: 29 mpg city, 39 mpg highway, 33 mpg combined (8.0 L/100km city, 6.4 L/100km highway, 7.3 L/100km combined)

Body style: Compact four-door sedan.

Base price: $23,165 including freight ($25,845 Canadian)

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Price as tested: $25,165 including freight ($28,595 Canadian)

How’s It Look?

2025 Kia K4 EX

From the plastic cladding to the hidden rear door handles to the unusual C-pillar treatment, the look of the Kia K4 is unique and certainly not everyone’s cup of tea. When I showed my parents a picture of what I was driving for the week, they proceeded to roast the styling non-stop for 15 minutes. Considering they used to own a Toyota Echo, that’s a little bit crushing, but that’s just one perspective.

Allow me to posit another: Kia is the new Pontiac. Aggressive styling, plastic cladding, a focus on technology. The K4 simply looks edgier than a Civic or Corolla, like it listens primarily to nu-metal and wants to have gauged ears. I kinda dig it, but I’ll also probably wear skinny jeans until the day I die, so your mileage may vary.

What’s The Interior Like?

2025 Kia K4 EX

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Slide behind the wheel of the Kia K4 and you’ll be met with a cabin that punches way beyond its weight class while remaining almost entirely free of irritants plaguing cars that cost three or four times as much. The dashboard and tops of the door cards are covered in soft-touch vinyl, rich cloth door card inserts add a bit of punch, and instead of shiny black plastic, Kia’s largely gone with a satin grey that hides fingerprints better. Wise decision.

2025 Kia K4 EX

So how about comfort? Well, the K4 EX’s lovely soft cloth upholstery feels as luxurious as having Viennetta for dessert, but the front seats themselves are quite flat and hard. A bit more wedge to the bottom cushion for additional thigh support or a bit more rake to the steering wheel would be appreciated, especially with the Mazda 3 showing that better comfort is possible at this price point. The flipside is an enormous rear seat with 38 inches of rear legroom and plenty of headroom for reasonably sized adults. If you order a rideshare, you’ll probably wish for a K4 to pick you up.

2025 Kia K4 EX

As for other ergonomics, pretty much everything’s located where you want it to be. The button to cycle through drive modes is on the steering wheel, the button to bring up the backup camera feed while driving forward is conveniently located by the shifter, you have hard keys for important infotainment system functions, and the swiveling guides that let you convert the cup holder area into additional recessed storage are brilliant. Even the volume control on the steering wheel is a scroll wheel, because actually cranking the volume is far more satisfying than mashing buttons.

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2025 Kia K4 EX

However, just because things are located well doesn’t mean they always make sense. The unusual vertical scroll knob for stereo volume mounted right in the center of the dashboard also doubles as an on-off switch. As such, it’s tricky to get the pressure right to raise the volume without muting the sound completely.

How Does It Drive?

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Prod the starter button with a foot on the brake pedal, and Kia’s two-liter naturally aspirated four-cylinder engine sparks to life with the aggressive normalcy of a gas stove. With 147 horsepower and 138 lb.-ft. of torque on tap, it doesn’t exactly provide swift progress, but the butt dyno says that the zero-to-60 mph time should be on the quick side of nine seconds, and the CVT does a pretty good job of keeping the revs low in most conditions. With regular port injection, it’s exactly the sort of engine a compact car needs, something that’ll get the job done without being too high-tech for its own good. However, there is definitely a delay between pressing the throttle pedal and accelerating from a stop, which makes it hard to take off from a light eagerly yet smoothly. If locals near you tend to drive like maniacs, you’re going to notice this initial flinch.

Img 7163 1

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Initial lag aside, there’s lots to love here once you’re up to cruising speeds. The cabin of the K4 is reasonably quiet although not quite as hushed as a Honda Civic, the suspension is soft enough to soak up minor road imperfections but buttoned-down enough not to result in TV cop chase levels of body roll when you fly down an on-ramp far closer to the speed limit than the ramp advisory speed, and the pleasantly weighted steering is extremely predictable, if light on feedback. What’s more, you sit proper low, although the steering column could use a bit more reach adjustment.

Can It Conquer Snowmageddon?

2025 Kia K4 EX

I’d really love to tell you more about the normal driving characteristics of the Kia K4, but normal conditions were interrupted by a series of weather events that ought to be called the fuckening. Between Feb. 12 and 13, Toronto got nearly a foot of snow. Over the following weekend, it got nearly that amount again. With Tony Montana levels of powder on the ground, reports of lunatics skiing down Bloor Street soon surfaced, some crossover utility vehicle drivers learned the hard way that all-wheel-drive doesn’t necessarily equal all-wheel stop, and drivers across the city played a game of “Dude, where’s my lane?” Heavy snowfall doesn’t sound like the obvious environment for a compact sedan, but Kia wisely equipped this K4 press unit with a set of Continental VikingContact 7 studless winter tires. So how did this combo play out?

Fairly well, believe it or not. Kia’s fitted the K4 with three-stage stability control, and the intermediate stage proved crucial for forward progress at times. The VikingContact 7s tend to appreciate a little bit of slip, and with a fingertip touch on the wheel and knowledge of when to feather the throttle and when to let it eat, this compact sedan never got stuck. I wish it were possible to set off in a higher gear ratio, but CVTs are frequently like that. Sure, there were times when the main limitation was clearance, but inertia can be a great thing.

2025 Kia K4 EX

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Inertia can also be a heartless bitch, which is why a sub-3,000-pound curb weight is a lovely thing to have. It gives you the ability to scrub speed in slippery conditions quicker than something heavier, it’s light enough to prevent the K4 from getting properly bogged down in deep snow, and it certainly helps when changing direction. Sure, the steering’s a bit numb, but all that friction modifier atop the asphalt is like bullet time for oversteer and understeer, and it helped highlight the adjustability of the K4’s chassis. Understeer is easily neutralized with a quick lift or a light brush of the brakes,

The yards of plastic cladding might look a bit unusual, but they’re padding for the sport of busting through snow drifts, and they’re sturdily attached enough that nothing will come loose should you need to get somewhere before the plows have really gone to work. Even through a foot of snow, the K4 is proof that winter tires beat all-wheel-drive and all-seasons when the going gets wintry.

Does It Have The Electronic Crap I Want?

2025 Kia K4 EX

Considering the K4 EX only costs around $25,000, you certainly get a fair amount of kit. I’m talking Wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, a 12.3-inch touchscreen infotainment system with excellent black levels, LED lighting, a pretty good backup camera, a wireless phone charger, four USB-C ports, and a litany of advanced driver assistance systems. Even the six-speaker stereo is pretty good, serving up more than adequate power, punch, and clarity for the price point. It’s not on the level of the standard system in a Mazda 3, but for the segment, it’s one of the most engaging non-branded setups.

Now, there is a little bit of a difference depending on which side of the Canada-U.S. border you sit on. I drove the EX trim, but not the EX trim America gets. See, the Canadian model trades a 12.3-inch digital instrument cluster and automatic climate control for heated seats and a heated steering wheel, but that’s really the extent of the changes. In practice, the button-only manual climate control setup is a bit fiddly at first, but once your muscles acclimate to the layout, it offers fairly easy eyes-off operation.

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Three Things To Know About The 2025 Kia K4

  1. The seat fabric on the EX trim is incredibly soft.
  2. Having a scroll wheel as a steering wheel-mounted volume control is genius.
  3. The rear legroom’s capacious enough to make you wonder if you really need a bigger car.

Does It Fulfil Its Purpose?

2025 Kia K4 EX

Considering how making cars is hard and making inexpensive cars is doubly so, the Kia K4 has what it takes to be right in the mix of its competitive set. It’s not quite as refined as a Volkswagen Jetta or Honda Civic, but it’s substantially roomier than a Mazda 3 or Toyota Corolla, comes with seamless tech, serves up great fuel economy, and comes in at a fantastically low price tag.

What’s The Punctum Of The 2025 Kia K4?

The Kia K4 is yet more evidence that you don’t need to spend a lot of money to get a nice car.

All photos and top graphic image by Thomas Hundal

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William Domer
William Domer
7 hours ago

An inexpensive commuter leaves more money for toys: this a good thing. Wisconsinite here and we change out spouses Ionic road tires for snows every November. My Lexus Mechanic brother (retired) continues to say FWD RWD AWD, there are only 4 things touching the ground. Put on snows.

Nick Fortes
Nick Fortes
7 hours ago

Saw one of these at night recently. The rear taillight signature was extremely odd. Looks like the Ultimate Warrior’s face paint

Cayde-6
Cayde-6
7 hours ago

Considering the K4 EX only costs around $25,000, you certainly get a fair amount of kit. I’m talking Wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, a 12.3-inch touchscreen infotainment system with excellent black levels, LED lighting, a pretty good backup camera, a wireless phone charger, four USB-C ports

Can someone answer me why automakers so rarely include more than a single data USB port? Is the $5-10 or whatever really that make-or-break?

Pilotgrrl
Pilotgrrl
7 hours ago
Reply to  Cayde-6

Not to gloat, but my new Prius has 6…

Cayde-6
Cayde-6
6 hours ago
Reply to  Pilotgrrl

Data USB-C, or charging USB-C?

Pilotgrrl
Pilotgrrl
4 hours ago
Reply to  Cayde-6

4 data, 2 charging.

Peter d
Peter d
7 hours ago
Reply to  Cayde-6

For a long while it was tough to get the sockets from the manufacturers – but this should have resolved itself by now.

M SV
M SV
6 hours ago
Reply to  Cayde-6

It might be in the firmware you have to have method to switch which device is preferred or connected although some manufacturers have a button to select. It’s become like cup holder in the late 90s. I’ve seen people spend $2k more on a trim to get some more usb ports.

Captain Avatar
Captain Avatar
5 hours ago
Reply to  Cayde-6

Do you need more than one data USB port?

If I’m driving, then I would want my USB stick of music (with adapter) in that one. Does anyone in the car, other than the driver, need to do anything other than charge?

PresterJohn
PresterJohn
8 hours ago

I think the hatchback looks much better, but I don’t mind the sedan’s looks necessarily. I like that Kia gives a shit about this segment and does interesting things design-wise. They also don’t skimp on features at that price point which is something Toyota and Honda definitely do.

Adam
Adam
8 hours ago

Distinctive, yes. But that short wheelbase, long overhangs, and pointless black wheelarch trim pieces are all turn-offs, all rather surprising consider that like most of the rest of the Kia portfolio. I think I’d prefer a Civic…

George Danvers
George Danvers
8 hours ago

That’s all well and good, but what about news on the hatchback??

EXL500
EXL500
8 hours ago
Reply to  George Danvers

Came here for this. The hatch looks amazing.

DialMforMiata
DialMforMiata
8 hours ago

I was car shopping in the last few weeks and drove the K4 GT-Line Turbo. I was actually at the dealer to drive a leftover new 2024 Forte GT to replace my 2013 Soul, which has been a flawless performer for the last 12 years.

The K4 was… nice. It was quiet, comfortable and bang-up-to-date. It just about was able to get out of its own way but that was about it. I keep trying to love the styling but I just… can’t. And who knows if we’re actually getting the hatch or what it will cost by the time the tariffs and chicken tax are in place.

The Forte was FUN. Goofy, grinning fun. In Sport the DCT downshifts loudly and aggressively. Steering is communicative. Everything has a physical control and it’s all pretty intuitive. Is it state of the art in 2025? No, but I’m not a state of the art guy. It sounds good, looks really good and as a bonus I picked it up for roughly the price of a K4 EX. And it has all the toys. ALL of them. Adaptive cruise, LKA, all the safety stuff, you name it. And actual gauges instead of a screen!

Needless to say I went away with the Forte. Sometimes newer isn’t better.

DaFaRo
DaFaRo
8 hours ago

Nah, the design is fine. The form follows the generous interior space and that’s perfect. Not every car needs to be Mazda-3-sized for the looks.

Cayde-6
Cayde-6
7 hours ago
Reply to  DaFaRo

Or have Mazda-3-hatch-sized blind spots

Rippstik
Rippstik
9 hours ago

Your parents are right… the Toyota Echo looks better than this car… especially in Canadian hatchback form!

Millermatic
Millermatic
9 hours ago

Not specifically for this review… but I get a kick out of the “Does it have the electronic crap I want?” section of these. I’d rather it say “Does it have the electronic crap that I _don’t_ want.”

What does it do with my personal data? My location data? Do I have to use a touch screen to open the damn glove box? And this:  

In practice, the button-only manual climate control setup is a bit fiddly at first, but once your muscles acclimate to the layout, it offers fairly easy eyes-off operation.

Fiddly? I _far_ prefer button-only manual climate control systems to touch-screen driven automatic systems. Sometimes I just want to blast as much cold air as possible at my face. And I want to be able to do it without looking at it.

GreatFallsGreen
GreatFallsGreen
9 hours ago
Reply to  Millermatic

Compared to a touchscreen sure, but compared to knobs for temp and ideally fan, I’d say it looks fiddly.

Cayde-6
Cayde-6
7 hours ago
Reply to  Millermatic

You know that there are also button-only automatic systems, right?

TurdZilla
TurdZilla
9 hours ago

Hopefully the hatch actually makes it to the states, if only that had some more interesting powertrains.

Millermatic
Millermatic
9 hours ago
Reply to  TurdZilla

You’re right. The hatch is much better. The band on the rear pillar is a little weird… but it’s a fairly attractive car.

Adrian Clarke
Adrian Clarke
9 hours ago

It looks like the front half if one car and the back half of another. The proportions aft of the B pillar are yikes.

DialMforMiata
DialMforMiata
9 hours ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

I think the hatchback version will improve greatly on the disjointed sedan styling.

Adrian Clarke
Adrian Clarke
9 hours ago
Reply to  DialMforMiata

Not unless it loses a load of rear overhang.

also THIS is the sedan? Holy shit.

DialMforMiata
DialMforMiata
8 hours ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

The hatch loses several inches of overall length, all behind the rear wheel. It looks really nice.

Alexander Moore
Alexander Moore
48 minutes ago
Reply to  DialMforMiata

By replacing it with disjointed hatch styling, yes. The ‘floating’ pillar on the hatch is Nissan-levels of bad. I almost prefer the sedan, it clearly was designed first.

Last edited 48 minutes ago by Alexander Moore
Mr. Canoehead
Mr. Canoehead
8 hours ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

Didn’t Kia hire some hotshot designer from Audi? Their new designs are just awful. The back ends and placement of the lights are particularly egregious.

Adrian Clarke
Adrian Clarke
6 hours ago
Reply to  Mr. Canoehead

Peter Schreyer, I think he’s head of design for the whole group now but I’ve have to check.

William Domer
William Domer
7 hours ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

considering some of the early oughts sci fi styling from Japan this car looks clean and to the point. Nope I’m not a designer, but I prefer this over the Civic. Then again my wife has an Ionic and my favorite toy is the Del Sol in the garage, and I miss my Saab 900S convertible, so wtf do I know.

Adrian Clarke
Adrian Clarke
6 hours ago
Reply to  William Domer

Using your hand cover the back half of the car from the B pillar. Then do the same for the front half. The rear has the proportions of a much larger car.

Alexander Moore
Alexander Moore
46 minutes ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

Which means at least the front half looks pretty nice, which is more than can be said for most of its competitors (except the Mazda3).

Church
Church
2 hours ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

What do you have against Frankencars, Adrian?

Icouldntfindaclevername
Icouldntfindaclevername
9 hours ago

I like everything except it’s rear-end. That bottom up sweep looks like it was made to do wheelies.

Chronometric
Chronometric
9 hours ago

Can we start a GoFundMe to replace Altimas?

Jatco Xtronic CVT
Jatco Xtronic CVT
9 hours ago
Reply to  Chronometric

No! Not unless the replacement also has a Jatco CVT.

Chronometric
Chronometric
6 hours ago

Fair Warning. We will no longer support your long running gag if you insist on omitting the essential Xtronic element.

Rod Millington
Rod Millington
9 hours ago

A couple of feet of snow over the course of 5 days? *Laughs in Buffalo*

But in all seriousness, it’s good to see companies still making cars that are just relatively basic cars.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
9 hours ago

Glad to see a new reasonably sized sedan on the market.
And glad to see it has a reasonably nice interior.

However, I cannot get past the Dystopian-Homicide styling.
I think I’d rather be seen in a 30 year old Escort.

Tbird
Tbird
9 hours ago

I tend to like Hyundai and particularly Kia products when renting. They tend to to have well thought out ergonomics and pay attention to the touch points. I also prefer the styling overall to Toyota. I just worry about the long term investment as someone without an under 100k mile car in the fleet. A friend had a Soul with a blown motor at criminally low mileage. I hesitate to actually buy one.

Last edited 9 hours ago by Tbird
4jim
4jim
9 hours ago
Reply to  Tbird

My kid has had a soul since it was new in 2016 and it has been fantastic and she beats the hell out of it. It has been a rugby team bus since new.

Kurt B
Kurt B
9 hours ago
Reply to  Tbird

The bad Theta II generation was pretty bad, though my understanding was that they had fixed the issues in the subsequent generation and as long as you got a new one and not a rebuilt grenaded one you were okay. My Hyundai powerplant is a Lambda II though so I wouldn’t know.

Mr. Canoehead
Mr. Canoehead
8 hours ago
Reply to  Tbird

Between the grenading engines and the 6 month backlog for warranty replacements, I can’t believe anyone buys Hyundai ICE products. They seem to sell everything they manufacture, which makes no sense to me. What incentive is there for them to improve their product when people keep buying them?

Cranberry
Cranberry
2 hours ago
Reply to  Tbird

Yep, nice packaging, features for dollar and comfortable interior in my experience. Having to worry about the engine seizing in the boonies, being vandalized/stolen in the city, the various fire recalls all from cost-cutting in very different parts plus paying for insurance dampened the experience.

Also funny that folks have been saying “but they’re reliable/good now!” every year for 15 years.

I enjoyed my Sorento a lot, it took so much beating from me towing, off-road with nary a rattle but designed for a long time it was not. (but the build was good)

Last edited 2 hours ago by Cranberry
V10omous
V10omous
9 hours ago

Considering they used to own a Toyota Echo, that’s a little bit crushing, but that’s just one perspective.

Allow me to posit another: Kia is the new Pontiac.

Wow, speaking of crushing. Some of us remember Pontiac more fondly than that, whether it was deserved or not.

Rippstik
Rippstik
9 hours ago
Reply to  V10omous

Some of us remember how actually good the Toyota Echo was… which is 100% deserved.

William Domer
William Domer
7 hours ago
Reply to  V10omous

Pontiac: We Build Excrement

GreatFallsGreen
GreatFallsGreen
9 hours ago

Allow me to posit another: Kia is the new Pontiac.

Have long felt the same – the outgoing Forte and now this are basically what your average Grand Am was ~30 years ago.

I liked the look of the old Forte, and liked the standard powertrain much more than I expected after getting one as a rental before. No doubt this is at least as competent, but after seeing these on the roads it’s one of the rare cases where I like the styling less. But as mentioned below I will give it credit that it’s not necessarily obvious where it falls in the range visually. It’s midrange, but that’s no guarantee for an improvement over a base model, and here there’s not much the base one seems to give up visually. Kia tends to do better with that than Hyundai.

Also looks like Canadian EXs get rear seat air vents too which US ones don’t, apparently Turbo only.

Younork
Younork
9 hours ago

It’s still hard for me to choose this over the Honda Civic Hybrid. The Civic looks way nicer, and I bet you make the $3k price difference back over the life of the car in gas savings alone, let alone resale value. However, I doubt this will be any less reliable than the Civic, the Kia 2.0 engines are free from the GDI issues which have plagued the brand for a decade. I do worry about the CVT on the Kia if it is a belt variant, I think the Civic is an eCVT, which would be better for longevity. I’m glad this car exists, proving the compact economy car is not totally dead, but I just think it is ugly, and I personally won’t buy a new vehicle that is not either a hybrid or a stick. The Corolla also has AWD which is cool.

HonkeyfromtheCIA
HonkeyfromtheCIA
9 hours ago
Reply to  Younork

At the end of the day, it’s still a KIA and fair or not you’re going to feel that at resale/trade in/warranty expiration time. Also, Corolla LE Hybrids can be had, at least in my area, for slightly less than $25K.

Younork
Younork
9 hours ago

I’ve looked at the Corollas, and it is neat you can get AWD and a hybrid, but they’re really basic and small. It’s almost like the Civic and the Kia have moved half a segment up in size and class.

3WiperB
3WiperB
10 hours ago

I had the 2025 Elantra sibling as a rental last weekend (mini review in “readers rides” on the discord). There was a lot to like, especially at the price point. The road noise was very loud at 70mph and above. It did get about 40mpg over the nearly 500 miles I drove it. It’s very big inside for a compact car. There’s a ton of rear seat legroom. I liked the K4 interior a bit better at the auto show this year vs. the Elantra. Both don’t feel or look cheap.

Last edited 10 hours ago by 3WiperB
Nsane In The MembraNe
Nsane In The MembraNe
10 hours ago

I’m glad that new sedans are still coming out in this day and age and while I personally think the styling is incredibly busy and overdone it does make a statement…and I agree with Millermagic, the average person isn’t going to think you’re in an economy car which is a pretty big win. I also see these frequently so clearly they’re appealing to someone.

Millermatic
Millermatic
10 hours ago

For $25K… it makes me question what on earth I’m missing for an additional $25K. Styling is, of course, subjective… but it certainly doesn’t scream “cheap” or “I’m poor.” Well done.

Odie
Odie
9 hours ago
Reply to  Millermatic

A motor that will last more than three years.

Millermatic
Millermatic
9 hours ago
Reply to  Odie

Do they not still have a 10 year, 100,000 mile powertrain warranty? I’d put up with three new engines at no cost over the first 10 years…

Mr. Canoehead
Mr. Canoehead
8 hours ago
Reply to  Millermatic

If you had to wait 6 months for each replacement? That seems to be the current wait times in Canada.

Nathan
Nathan
3 hours ago
Reply to  Millermatic

It has the warranty, and it does not have one of the problem engines with direct injection.

DaFaRo
DaFaRo
9 hours ago
Reply to  Odie

I have seen several 2.0 Fortes with well over 200,000 miles, it’s very reliable.

Arch Duke Maxyenko
Arch Duke Maxyenko
10 hours ago

The styling looks like they took pictures of other cars, cut them into pieces, then just grabbed random bits and taped them together. Also why is the steering wheel and oval?

D-dub
D-dub
8 hours ago

The new 2025 Kia rAnsOMNoTE

Last edited 8 hours ago by D-dub
Jesus Chrysler drives a Dodge
Jesus Chrysler drives a Dodge
10 hours ago

I speed-read the car in the headline as a Funkia KAEX. Lifestyle segment sub-brand?

Ranwhenparked
Ranwhenparked
9 hours ago

Not sure if that’s better than the “KN K4 EX” that most people will call it after seeing one out on the road

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