Quote:
Originally Posted by extrashaky
And "GT" is nothing more than a throwback to the 2000GT name.
The ONLY reason this car is called an "86" is for marketing purposes. It gives the enthusiasts something to hang a reference on. It doesn't share any styling cues with the AE86, nor does it share any technical inspiration other than being RWD. It's not any more a relative of the AE86 than a second step-cousin twice removed.
The style of this car is based on the 2000GT. The underpinnings are new. But if Toyota had said, "We're bringing back the 2000GT," the majority of potential buyers would have said, "The what?" Then, since the 2000GTs that still exist are going for $1M or more, people would have concluded that the new car would be expensive. So they hung the 86 on it to imply that it would be cheap.
This forced "lineage" is goofy.
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I was just answering whoever asked why the "GT" was dropped from "GT86" for the twins.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toyota_86
Toyota 86 in Asia, South Africa, North America (from August 2016), South America and Australia;[1] GT86 in Europe; both of the preceding names in New Zealand; FT86 in Nicaragua and Jamaica;
Subaru BRZ worldwide;
Scion FR-S in the US and Canada. After August 2016 the Scion FR-S will be renamed as the Toyota 86.[2][3]