What buyer type are you

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What is your primary buying/using interest with the new Scout


  • Total voters
    44
I want to expand on the idea behind "what kind of buyer are you"

I love cars and I also love the analysis that can come from associating what vehicle someone buys is a reflection of who they are and what they value as a person. Cars not only are the 2nd most expensive thing people buy, but many will spend more time in their cars than any individual room in their homes....so i find that the car you choose to buy is deeply personal.

price isn't always a factor in the analysis. as an example i was telling my friend about it and then i turned to his car a Honda HR-V. He then blurted out "you can tell i'm cheap". I replied that isn't necessarily the case. The HR-V has great gas mileage, it is practical, is has more passenger volume than cargo volume, and it is front wheel drive.....the other factor that i know from being his friend is that he is extremely frugal, he has enough money to buy more expensive cars but his main car is a early 2000s Nissan that still works fine. so because of that he HAD to spend money on his wife's car and the things he clearly found valuable enough to spend money on is his kids/family. Driving performance wasn't important to him and cargo space was a minor need for only occasional short road trips and no off roading.

the things i value as a person and therefore what i want in a vehicle:
- I value my family most of all so i want good comfortable passanger volume
- I want to work on my house, so i need cargo and towing
- I enjoy driving, finding the proper line and making a smooth transition in and out of curves, I used to enjoy stick shift but acceleration on demand is also something i value.
- I value nature so being able to drive down the beach or towing a small boat to a boat launch or just getting me a little down an unpaved road.
- I also really value efficiency. I don't like the idea of waste.....so MPG or MPGe is a very important comparison point for me.
 
I want to expand on the idea behind "what kind of buyer are you"

I love cars and I also love the analysis that can come from associating what vehicle someone buys is a reflection of who they are and what they value as a person. Cars not only are the 2nd most expensive thing people buy, but many will spend more time in their cars than any individual room in their homes....so i find that the car you choose to buy is deeply personal.

price isn't always a factor in the analysis. as an example i was telling my friend about it and then i turned to his car a Honda HR-V. He then blurted out "you can tell i'm cheap". I replied that isn't necessarily the case. The HR-V has great gas mileage, it is practical, is has more passenger volume than cargo volume, and it is front wheel drive.....the other factor that i know from being his friend is that he is extremely frugal, he has enough money to buy more expensive cars but his main car is a early 2000s Nissan that still works fine. so because of that he HAD to spend money on his wife's car and the things he clearly found valuable enough to spend money on is his kids/family. Driving performance wasn't important to him and cargo space was a minor need for only occasional short road trips and no off roading.

the things i value as a person and therefore what i want in a vehicle:
- I value my family most of all so i want good comfortable passanger volume
- I want to work on my house, so i need cargo and towing
- I enjoy driving, finding the proper line and making a smooth transition in and out of curves, I used to enjoy stick shift but acceleration on demand is also something i value.
- I value nature so being able to drive down the beach or towing a small boat to a boat launch or just getting me a little down an unpaved road.
- I also really value efficiency. I don't like the idea of waste.....so MPG or MPGe is a very important comparison point for me.
Great added point of view
My kid is off to college in 4 months so family need is less for me
-I love design-especially cars-always wanted to be a car designer. The lines, the details, aesthetics.
-I’m a spirited driver BUT a driver. I don’t play on my phone-safety matters a lot as it relates to performance. I don’t talk with my hands. To me my drive is an experience, not a necessary evil.
-personally, I don’t care what’s inside so long as it works and is reliable. Could be 2 hamsters in a wheel-just doesn’t matter to me so long as performance satisfies me
-I LOVE open air driving. I believe so long as it’s over 50 degrees and no precipitation I like the top downs. So good heater is important. My first convertible I’d bundle up my daughter first snow fall each year and we’d drive in the snow-LOVED it.
-this vehicle style helps me escape and also slows me down. Little time for boating but archery will minimize when my daughter leaves so fishing is going to be reignited and the flexibility of a Scout/Bronco does what I need
-“fuel” economy matters but I don’t commute and I don’t expect a box on wheels to be stellar so hopefully Scout will blow my mind and average like 26-28 mpg-e.
Thanks for throwing in this angle-hoping others share their “secret” stories
 
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-“fuel” economy matters but I don’t commute and I don’t expect a box on wheels to be stellar so hopefully Scout will blow my mind and average like 26-28 mpg-e.
just for reference 26 MPGe would be terrible....for reference the Rivian gets 74 MPGe and whats worse is the HUMMER EV which gets about 47MPGe and is considered a terribly inefficient vehicle...much like it's ICE version.
 
just for reference 26 MPGe would be terrible....for reference the Rivian gets 74 MPGe and whats worse is the HUMMER EV which gets about 47MPGe and is considered a terribly inefficient vehicle...much like it's ICE version.
Feel like GMC going with 35” MTs as the only tire option was a PR mistake, it would have been wise to also offer a street focused/maximum MPGe tire option as well like Rivian did... particularly because of the Hummer’s history with efficiency or the lack thereof.

Rivian R1T: Standard ~33” All Seasons (73 MPGe) Vs ~34” All Terrains (64 MPGe)
 
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Oh thanks. I didn’t go back that far when I joined.

I love my Wrangler and when I started looking back in 2022 I Googled what cars look like a Wrangler and the Scout came up. An article with the initial drawing. I just kept telling my husband I’m not buying anything till I see it.

I wish I would have looked further and found the forum. I just have never really been on social media and never a forum.
 
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I voted for the 2 that represent me the most and apparently I'm in the minority since both now have 2 votes total. Though I think the demographics on the site in 2023 were probably more long term Scout enthusiasts vs people who have come here because of design and capabilities.

Using me as an example, I have always loved the Scout, but I'm not interested in this vehicle based on anything to do with the history of the brand. I have also always loved the Bronco, but would not buy the current model on the looks alone. The new Scout design is just beautiful though and I have always been a person who needs to really like the looks of my vehicle. I am also not an EV enthusiast. Would I love my next vehicle to be an EV? Sure, but I'd still hold a reservation if the Scout had an engine rather than batteries.
 
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Will it let you pick more than 2?
Only two.

I don’t really know what “authentic” means here, but I do appreciate unique vehicles. And interesting vehicles. And EVs are the most interesting thing left in the automotive world, IMO.

Screenshot 2026-05-09 at 08.01.06.png
 
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I voted for the 2 that represent me the most and apparently I'm in the minority since both now have 2 votes total. Though I think the demographics on the site in 2023 were probably more long term Scout enthusiasts vs people who have come here because of design and capabilities.

Using me as an example, I have always loved the Scout, but I'm not interested in this vehicle based on anything to do with the history of the brand. I have also always loved the Bronco, but would not buy the current model on the looks alone. The new Scout design is just beautiful though and I have always been a person who needs to really like the looks of my vehicle. I am also not an EV enthusiast. Would I love my next vehicle to be an EV? Sure, but I'd still hold a reservation if the Scout had an engine rather than batteries.
And you are the perfect example of why I gave it a bump. Will help rebalance the demographics, or perhaps it won’t but you are an example that I think is becoming the norm for Scouts
 
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What was that Billy Crystal character (maybe from SNL) that talked about the importance of looking good?
:)
This?
 
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I just like the little guys and the start-ups. **** the Big 3, **** car companies in general. The closest answer is “long-time Scout owner/enthusiast” I guess, and “other.”

In a perfect world where I had nothing but money and time, I would pay someone however many hundreds of thousands needed to put an EV engine into an 1975ish Scout body like the one my parents had and would love nothing more than to give one of the people who keep voicing their desire for a V8 Scout some serious rage diarrhea. That would truly be in line with my ethics and values. It should be less expensive and more realistic to wait a couple of years for the Traveler EV.
 
I ended up picking other. I really wasn’t into cars until I learned about the Scout Revival while searching the internet and became enamored with it. Current drive a 3 series but mainly because I love the blue exterior and tan interior combo and very much appreciate it, but ever since I learned about Scout, the 3 just seems like any other car (sorry Beemer I still love you). Want to be an early adopter of a new exciting looking brand