We need to talk about an epidemic gripping the globe. Plastic cladding is spreading everywhere from SUVs to compact cars, and it’s getting out of hand. It’s an easy crutch for visually slimming out the bulk of modern vehicles, but it’s easy to go overboard. Case in point:Â Subaru just unveiled a new cladding package for the Forester in Japan, and it’s absurdly excessive.
There is some precedent for this. Subaru previously released an accessory cladding package for the Crosstrek including tie-downs built into plastic flares and chunky door ding protectors, and it seemed over-the-top then. However, it has nothing on this specially specced Forester, which takes things to a new extreme.


Let’s start with the ridiculously aggressive rub strips on the doors, ribbed for strength like pieces of sports armor. They don’t seem to follow any natural contours, instead imposing themselves on clean sheetmetal like plastic monoliths in an open field. It’s the sort of thing that’s difficult to avert your eyes from, like an explosion or a high-speed police chase. Oh, and they leave a critical strip of metal uncovered, so someone could come along at the right angle and ding this Forester regardless.

Then there’s the grille, which looks like it was stolen off a half-ton pickup truck. There’s no actual Subaru badge on it, instead relying on a wordmark stamped into plastic for branding, and the contrast of two strong vertical elements against horizontal slats turns this Forester into a sabretoothed crossover.

Oh, and we can’t forget about the headlight and taillight protectors that only seem like they’d protect against hits from the side. I actually kinda like the graphic extensions they provide, although the almost snakeskin-like finish is a bit much for me. Still, it beats fake carbon fiber, and offers some contrast against matte plastic.

However, the flipside of this appearance package is that it comes with a sweet set of mountain-themed graphics that seem straight out of the ’90s. Extending down the lower doors and across the tailgate, this is the sort of fun we can get behind. While Ford’s been doing a great job with the Bronco Sport Free Wheeling, more cars need graphics, and Subaru seems ready to deliver.

In case you’re wondering what this full treatment is called, it’s named the Adventure Style package, and it’s certainly adventurous. Not everyone’s going to be a fan of the look, but for REI-ing to the max, this might be what you need. Unfortunately, it seems to only be sold in Japan. Sure, it’s no Forester Ultimate Customized Kit Special, but this Forester sure won’t be easy to misplace in a parking lot.
Top graphic image: Subaru
Support our mission of championing car culture by becoming an Official Autopian Member.
-
This Subaru Is What Everyone In Brooklyn Will Drive When Society Finally Collapses
-
Why The 2025 Subaru Forester Hybrid Is The Only Forester You Should Even Consider
-
This Is The 2026 Subaru Forester Wilderness Before You’re Supposed To See It
-
The 2025 Subaru WRX ‘tS’ Fixes The Worst Flaw Of Modern Subarus
-
Why The 2025 Subaru Outback Touring XT Is Still The King Of The Midsize Crossovers
Please send tips about cool car things to tips@theautopian.com. You could even win a prize!
is the design team at Subaru trolling all of us on just how ugly they can make their cars time after time after time?
“Astonishing” – yes, that certainly is…a…word? That one might use in a sentence. With other words?
Some people say we’re in the worst timeline. I don’t believe that, but I do think we’re in the stupidest one.
Terrible. 90s Grand Prix coupes were how you do cladding correctly
I will be honest – I want to hate this. But I feel that if you remove the chunky door guards it’s pretty awesome. It’s not a beautiful car, but the front end and mountain graphics give it that “bubble era” flavor of over the top design.
This! The Jackson Galaxy beard streaks on the doors are terrible, but the rest is fun!