Does A Roof Box Hurt Your Car’s Performance?

Roof boxes are a convenient and easy way to add more cargo space to your car for a...

2025 Hyundai Ioniq 5 XRT Is A Rallycross Machine That’s So Fun You’ll Forgive Its Strange Looks

It's always fun to see an automaker do something weird just because it can. That's exactly what is...

Singer’s Naturally Aspirated Porsche 911 Carrera Coupe Will Really Blaze It With 420 HP And 1980s Style

Southern California's premier Porsche re-imaginer Singer Vehicle Design has come up with yet another incredibly wild variant of...

Californians Reject Elon Musk As Tesla’s EV Market Share Drops Below 50%

According to the California New Car Dealers Association, the state's seen some pretty impressive new electric vehicle sales growth...

Tesla Is Trying To Rebrand The Cybertruck As An Everyman Vehicle

If Tesla's April 22 earnings report made anything clear, it's that Cybertruck sales are in the crapper. Less...

With More Power Than A GTI The 2026 Volkswagen Tiguan Turbo Might Be Cool Again

Volkswagen used to supply average American car buyers with vehicles that were slightly elevated and distinctly European compared...

You Need A 700-Horsepower Subaru WRX STI In Your Life

So you want a fast car, but you're not looking to drop supercar cash on something so mechanically...

2025 Chevrolet Blazer EV SS Is A Normal Family Crossover With Supercar Speed

It took a hell of a long time for Chevy to get the 2025 Blazer EV SS out...

Man In Branded Cybertruck Doing Nazi-Style Salutes At Hecklers Craters Company’s Yelp Reviews

You would think we would all understand that you should probably keep behaving yourself while representing your company....

Hyundai Elantra N Continues To Punch Above Its Weight, Beating Toyota GR Corolla In Edmunds’ U-Drag Race

The Hyundai Elantra N is the kind of car that shouldn't be nearly as enjoyable to drive as...

The Chevy Suburban Is The Only Car With A Star On The Hollywood Walk Of Fame

Not only is the Chevrolet Suburban the longest-running automotive nameplate in America, it's also the only vehicle to...

2026 Hyundai Ioniq 6 Looks Slightly Less Weird, But It’s Still Really Weird, And That’s Good

The Hyundai Ioniq 6 instantly became one of the most divisive new car reveals in a long time...

Europeans Are Refusing To Buy Teslas As Sales Crater

Tesla's sales in Germany and the United Kingdom are so dismal they are pretty much becoming a statistically...

What’s The Deal With Ford’s New Megazilla 2.0 Crate Engine?

Ford announced the 7.3-liter, gas-fired, naturally aspirated, pushrod V8 Godzilla engine to its friends and associates way back...

Volkswagen Put An Experimental W10 Engine In BMW’s Best M5

The legend of the Volkswagen Group's rebellious, daring, and absurdist creations pitched and produced under the rule of...

I Finally Found A Real Use For Hyundai’s Smart Park

I love a good gimmick in a car, something with a fairly limited or seemingly unnecessary use case that...

Converting A Honda Prelude To Four-Wheel Drive Is Easy: Just Add Another Engine

So you're prepping your fifth-generation Honda Prelude for drag racing, and you're thinking of going down the tried and...

Michelin Put This Porsche 904 On Citroën Hydropneumatic Suspension And Used It To Test Tires For Decades

Porsche's ludicrously beautiful 904 Carrera GTS is among the coolest race cars of all time. With a lightweight...

Forget The Volkswagen Phaeton’s Trunk Hinges, Let’s Nerd Out About Its Ridiculously Complicated A/C System

Volkswagen didn't need to make the Phaeton, and arguably, it probably shouldn't have been anything more than a...

At $3,400, Is This 1998 Toyota Camry LE An Exciting Deal?

The seller of today's Nice Price or No Dice Camry boasts that the car is super-rare owing to...

Whiners Rejoice: Hyundai Promises To Keep Buttons In Next-Gen Interiors

Hyundai is in the final stages of prepping its next generation of interiors, set to debut sometime in 2026, and the Korean automaker promises that physical buttons will still be abundant. I’m sure this is great news for people on the internet who don’t buy new cars and love to complain.

Adding to the excitement for Luddites, Hyundai is also expected to create smaller infotainment screens with easier-to-use software. The company’s vice president, Simon Loasby, confirmed the news to Autocar at the Seoul Motor Show. It’s a similar move to what Volkswagen has done in some of its cars like the updated Golf GTI.

“So our philosophy is to keep the eyes on the road and keep your hands on the wheel, and then you could very quickly look at what are your frequent-use interactions. There aren’t many… but you want them to stay as physical buttons because those are things I want to adjust without looking away.”

He added: “It is all about the philosophy of calmness. The technology is there, but it is not shouting at us, but the architecture is keeping the driving experience safe.

“So we will have a balance of physical buttons but the display [will be there too] because it gives you the extra layers you can go in to.”

Loasby tells Autocar that the move is being made in the name of safety: creating a better way to keep the driver’s eyes on the road as much as possible. He says designers and engineers at Hyundai realized that a central infotainment screen is actually “just a distraction.” Ideally, you don’t want people looking at screens for a long period of time. You want them looking down the road.

A more driver-focused interior

Hyundai’s design boss, Luc Donckerwolke (great name, great car designer), says that figuring out what the ideal screen size is, and making it usable, will be a big part of the automaker’s next generation of interiors. He described a “balance” between having a screen with all of the relevant information you could want in a size that doesn’t take away from driving concentration. Here’s what else he told Autocar:

“At the same time, we have to make sure the screens are not forcing you to go into a sub-menus for operations that only required buttons before. So it’s always not overkilling it. If you rely only on screens, you are tending to go away from… hands on the steering wheel and the eyes on the road, which is, for me, the most important factor of security safety.”

He added that while “we all have a love for analogue interaction”, screens “are ideal because you save a lot of tooling by only having the screen”.

Donckerwolke predicted that the automotive industry — as a whole — will see a real return to analog interactions and a reduction of screens in the “next one or two generations.” This should all be music to your ears if you see screens as a great scourge on society.

He also spoke about what we can expect to see out of the interiors of upcoming Hyundai N-badged vehicles. We can apparently expect to see even more stuff on the steering wheel “because when I’ve got gloves on, I can’t use a touchscreen.” That’s some real driver-focused thinking if I’ve ever seen it, so here’s hoping it arrives in time for the recently-confirmed Ioniq 6 N.

Listen, you all know my feelings on modern car interiors. I’ve said in the past that complaints from the enthusiast community about big screens and a lack of buttons are generally overblown, but I supposed Hyundai sees a niche in the market for a less tech-laden interior. There’s nothing wrong with more options for the general car-buying public.


Source: http://www.jalopnik.com/1826574/hyundai-2026-next-gen-car-interior-buttons/

Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
guest