The MR2 of the future?

More electric spectacle from Toyota today comes from the FT-Se. The Toyota FT-Se is a spectacular electric two-seater that enthusiasts of cars like the MR2 can only hope will go into production.
At the end of 2021, Toyota pulled out a huge number of study models. This included the Sports EV Concept, a car of which Toyota has shown an apparently more production-ready evolution in the form of this FT-Se. First of all: Toyota hardly releases any information and we officially know nothing about production plans. However, the fact that Toyota is showing a conceptual electric two-seater for the second time suggests that it is more than just an empty shell.

Toyota FT-Se
According to Toyota, the FT-Se broadly gives away what a future sports car from the brand could look like. According to Toyota, the Sports EV Concept that we briefly mentioned would have a mid-engine. Given that the car turns quite diagonally in the footage released by Toyota, we expect it to be a rear-wheel drive car. So expect the electric motors to be placed close to the rear wheels. The sporty study model has a relatively short and strongly sloping snout with large cooling openings and striking lighting that is mainly oriented vertically. By the way, you won’t find any Toyota badges on it: the FT-Se is packed with GR badges. Toyota even shows an even sportier version of the FT-Se, one with a fixed rear spoiler.

Toyota FT-Se
The interior of the Toyota FT-Se also exudes sportiness. We see a steering wheel that looks straight out of a racing car, sporty bucket seats and a cockpit that, with the three screens placed in front of the driver, seems entirely focused on sporty stomping around. In the middle is the digital instrumentation, on two small screens on either side of the steering wheel we see information about lap times, the level of regeneration and information about the apparently present boost mode. Also striking is the blue fishnet-like decoration that covers parts of the cockpit.
Would you like to see a production version of this Toyota FT-Se? Why or why not?
– Thanks for information from Autoweek.nl
































