The Koenigsegg Gemera is enjoying its day out on the farm
Sweden’s 1,700bhp four-seater is not your usual barn-find fodder
Koenigsegg’s doing social-distancing right. Recently, it let the 300mph+ Jesko Absolut out for a roam around the company’s private runway. Now, it’s let its latest announcement, the 1,700bhp Gemera four-seater, out for a play in the sunshine.
Only 300 Gemeras will be built, each costing somewhere in the ballpark of €1.7million. And usually, when a four-seat vertical-doored hypercar with a mouth-mangling name and promises of eleventeen-hundred horsepower from [checks notes] an engine the size of a Ford Focus’s motor, well, Top Gear pops to the wardrobe and puts on its Skeptical Hat. Because it sounds like well-meaning cartoonish nonsense.
However, when Koenigsegg says it’s building a family car with so many superpowers it could become a new member of Marvel’s Avengers, we put on our ‘We’re Listening Intently’ Hat instead. So, take five, ogle the Gemera exploring a rural airstrip, and get a load of these specs.
Advertisement - Page continues belowKoenigsegg says the 800-volt battery in the Gemera will power its rear-wheel electric motors for up to 31 miles with zero local emissions, no noise, and a top speed of 186mph. Sufficient?
Apparently, for €1.7m you don't even get a luggage-fitting lesson. That costs extra. However...
Advertisement - Page continues below... despite housing a 2.0-litre petrol engine, electric drivetrain and space for four adults, the Gemera can apparently swallow up to 200-litres of luggage, in these handy bespoke cases. They ought to be very easy to spot on the baggage claim carousel.
In case you missed the memo, in the year 2020 it's now illegal to present a futuristic-looking new car and fit it with actual, physcial, medieval door mirrors.
It moves! In fact, Koenigsegg claims its hybrid family car will launch from 0-62mph in 1.9 seconds, which means it's actually quicker to accelerate than the chimes from the mouths of Tesla disciples who refuse to believe anyone could build a quicker four-seater than Elon.
We'll be honest, we thought Koenigsegg's factory would be a *little* more outwardly impressive.
Advertisement - Page continues belowYou'd forgive a supercar maker that had drawn something this outlandish for not getting bogged down in all that 'normal car' flim-flam, and not bothering with expensive-to-code driver aids. Not here. Koenigsegg says each Gemera will be fitted as standard with six ‘smart’ airbags, traction control, stability control, ABS and advanced driver assistance systems. But no parachute.
Call us crazy, but is it just us that sees ever-such-a-tiny-little bit of Porsche Cayman about that backside?
Advertisement - Page continues belowNot content with wiper and indicator controls that move with the steering wheel, Koenigsegg's designed the whole instrument screen to pivot with the wheel, though the display always remains pointing 'up', so to speak. The front touchscreen is a 13-incher. Got FOMO, rear passengers? Worry not - there's another screen in the back just for you.
The Gemera's design owes more to Koenigsegg's earlier work than the more recent Agera RS or Regera. Not our words, but the words of the extremely talented man who sketched it.
As much of an Angelholm trademark as the batty performance figures are the vertical-opening 'Koenigsegg Automated Twisted Synchrohelix Actuation Doors'. The carbon core of the car is so strong than even with a 3m-long wheelbase, Koenigsegg has been able to ditch the B-pillar to ease access into the cabin.
Done looking at pictures of the Gemera? Then you'll want some moving images and sound for dessert, then? Allow us to oblige, with TopGear's guided video tour of the new Mega-GT.
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