G-Wagen-inspired golf cart works as a second car

▼ Summary
– Amble, a Lisbon-based EV startup, has created the Amble One, a street-legal electric buggy that rejects industry trends toward speed and self-driving tech.
– The Amble One features a premium, neo-retro design and is targeted at locations where traditional cars are impractical or unnecessary.
– The vehicle has no self-driving features and is not designed for impressive acceleration, focusing instead on being a downgrade from large, fast cars.
– The startup aims to counter the belief that cars have become too big and too fast.
– The Amble One is currently being marketed to places where conventional cars are seen as excessive.
While the automotive world obsesses over range anxiety and aerodynamic drag in the electric vehicle space, a Lisbon-based startup is taking a refreshingly different approach. Amble, a new EV company from Portugal, has unveiled its Amble One electric buggy, a vehicle that deliberately ignores the typical benchmarks of speed and autonomy. It has no self-driving capabilities and won’t win any drag races. Instead, the company challenges the notion that cars have become excessively large and fast, suggesting that a meaningful downgrade in size and speed could be exactly what the market needs.
The Amble One is a street-legal, premium buggy that draws inspiration from classic, boxy off-roaders like the Mercedes-Benz G-Wagen. Its design is a deliberate throwback, blending retro aesthetics with a modern, minimalist finish. Rather than targeting highways or long commutes, Amble is positioning the vehicle for environments where a full-sized car feels out of place. Think beachside communities, sprawling resorts, university campuses, or even as a stylish second car for short urban trips.
This isn’t just a glorified golf cart, however. The company emphasizes quality and legality, ensuring the buggy meets all necessary road regulations for low-speed vehicles in many markets. By stripping away the complexity of high-speed EVs and advanced driver aids, Amble aims to offer a simpler, more charming, and arguably more practical solution for the last mile of daily travel. It’s a bet that some drivers are ready to trade top speed for personality and a smaller footprint.
(Source: The Verge)




