Great rivals aren't in the habit of doing each other favours.
Would Borg and McEnroe have lent each other a racket? David Coulthard says Michael Schumacher once let him borrow a spare racing helmet.
But what if Damon Hill had asked? You have to wonder, therefore, if Toyota actually considered Honda a great rival when in 1978 - in an act so widely reported as an 'amicable transfer' as surely to have been how the parties directly involved described it - the rights to a certain model name trademark that Toyota happened to own were signed over to its domestic-market competitor.
That's how the Honda Prelude got its name. Toyota's way of 'amicably' acknowledging Honda's penchant for model titles with musical themes, supposedly. I don't buy it. Of all of those (and between the Ballade, Concerto, Quintet, Jazz and Beat there would be plenty), only the Accord existed in 1978. Not enough established precedent, surely. There must have been some other quid pro quo.
At any rate, it was the spark of life for a line of mid-sized, front-drive coupés that eventually brought some interesting new technologies to affordable levels of the new car market throughout the 1980s and 1990s - only to bow out in 2001. The Prelude had blooded mechanical four-wheel steering and an early form of front-axle torque vectoring before it left the stage, as well as benefiting from Honda's celebrated VTEC combustion technology.

So long was the hiatus that the car subsequently took, however, that Honda had to re-register the Prelude trademark in the North American market in 2023. While some attentive hacks noticed, few seemed to know whether to be excited or not. The sixth-generation Prelude duly arrived anyway, every bit as bold as its various predecessors - albeit in rather different ways. Here in Europe, it's re-entering a coupé segment from which its competitors have almost universally fled.
And it's doing so with a car that doesn't have a rasping multi-cylinder engine with which to tempt buyers, nor even a high-revving four-cylinder VTEC screamer. It's doing so with a hybrid. Can that work? Time to take a view. Twenty-five years ago, back when the world was still getting used to the original Honda Insight, you wouldn't have given this strategy a prayer. But in 2026? Anything's possible.
Bring on the rivals
There has always been an alternative streak about the Prelude, so it didn't seem suitable to take a conventional approach when picking rivals for it. As it happened, BMW was unable to supply a BMW 2 Series Coupe, but the Bavarian is a rear-driven option with a much more traditional longways-mounted combustion engine anyway, whereas the Prelude is, and has always been, a front-drive progressive.







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Dumb line up of cars for a shoot out. Let alone the technical aspect you've a 2 door coupe with a AAA size battery up against a Uber specialist, against a PHEV family hatchback.
Viewed from an objective standpoint, it's rubbish isn't it. It might make more sense in America, which is obviously where it's aimed at.
Say you can charge at home and do a lot of local trips, the Golf (or any proper Phev) will be the hugely better choice.
Autocar can't resist something new and shiny, therefore it won.
In the real world, people cross shop all the time. They don't just compare cars from the same class.
Every review I've read of the Prelude has reviewer agree it works as a GT.Because it's use of bit softened type-R chassis gives it genuine if bit softened handling.So yes it's enjoyable at 8/10th. can do a comfortable enjoyable from turn to turn flow.But it isn't genuinely fast neither genuinely sporty, that's what some refuse to forgive.
The Prelude was always a small personal luxury coupe, never a sports car. The new model seems to reinterpret that positioning and design brief well.
100%
The Prelude was always a daily driver sporting car, not a weekend toy.
Honda has nailed the brief, and hopefully it resonates with enough buyers. It deserves to do well.