German cars are overrated IMHO.
A person who likes and buys say, Toyotas, typically neither understands nor cares about German cars' special appeal. They are designed for high performance at sustained high speeds as speed limited highways 'plod along' at 85 mph and many highways still have no speed limits AT ALL! And Germans drive FAST. If a German motorist has a Porsche capable of 200 mph, he WILL drive it at 200 mph! And all the VW Polos (smaller than VW Golfs and not available in North America) sucking wind at 125 mph are legally required to yield right!
They tend to have a "carved-from-solid-billet" structure and a firm and "connected" road feel with positive and quick steering response that are unmatched by cars made in the U.S. or Asia.
They tend toward austerity in their interior look, but that's just European taste. You either like the look or you don't. They aren't as reliable as Japanese appliance-transpods but they're typically overbuilt of sturdier materials. Properly maintained, they last a long time, a good thing, because German drivers hold onto their cars for longer than Americans typically do.
On a more personal note, German car interiors just fit my body type better than most American cars and certainly better than any Asian car I've ever driven; I find them more comfortable on the average.
In my experience, Japanese and Korean cars are numb and dull to drive and most American cars veritably ooze their mediocrity. They are "OK" - "MEH." And if "MEH"is all you want, they are fine. But to me most of them just don't have design, build quality or driving feel enough for 2016 kind of money. At the prices of modern automobiles, "OK" isn't going to be satisfactory. I want a car that makes me smile every time I get behind the wheel. If it doesn't, it's not worth its price.
You think German cars are overrated? So don't buy one. Whatever is most important to you in a car, find it and buy it. Meanwhile, I'll continue buying and lusting after German cars.
Sent from my SCH-R530U using Tapatalk