Mugen’s Super-One Looks Like a Race Car, But It Isn’t Fast
Performance Paradox - Electric cars are increasingly rewriting the rules of automotive design, blending nostalgia with futuristic ambition in ways that feel both familiar and surprising. In that space where past inspiration meets modern engineering, few creations capture the contrast as vividly as Mugen’s reworked Super-One—an electric car that looks ready for the racetrack, yet carries a powertrain that tells a very different story.
The Honda Mugen Super-One—an electric car that looks ready for the racetrack, yet carries a powertrain that tells a very different story. (Picture from: Carscoops)
The Super-Oneitself draws heavily from the playful spirit of the 1980s, echoing the compact and characterful presence ofthe classic City Turbo II. Honda’s original concept already leaned into retro performance cues, but Mugen, the brand’s long-time performance partner, decided to amplify that identity. Instead of chasing outright power, Mugen approached the car as a canvas for visual drama and sharper driving feel, crafting a version that appears far more aggressive than its humble electric output might suggest.
The Honda Mugen Super-One shows an immediately striking transformation with a black chin spoiler, vented hood, wide fender extensions, carbon mirror caps, deeper side skirts, and 16-inch forged wheels that emphasize a corner-focused, performance look. (Picture from: Carscoops)
From the outside, the transformation is immediately noticeable. A black chin spoiler and vented hood give the front end a purposeful edge, while pronounced wide fender extensions add muscularity along the sides. Carbon mirror caps, deeper side skirts, and lightweight 16-inch forged wheels reinforce the impression of a car built for corners rather than city streets. At the rear, a prominent roof spoiler and reshaped bumper extensions complete a look that feels closer to a touring car than a compact EV. The design doesn’t just hint at performance—it almost insists on it.
The Honda Mugen Super-One continues the theme inside with subtle yet meaningful upgrades, including Recaro semi-bucket seats and cohesive Mugen-branded details throughout the cabin. (Picture from: Carscoops)
Inside, the theme continues with subtle but meaningful upgrades. Semi-bucket seats from Recaro replace the standard chairs, offering a more focused driving position that matches the car’s visual intent. Mugen-branded touches appear across the cabin, from floor mats to scuff plates and even the steering wheel, creating a cohesive identity. It’s not a radical overhaul, but it reinforces the idea that this is a driver-oriented machine, even if its performance credentials remain modest.
The Honda Mugen Super-One features a prominent roof spoiler and reshaped rear bumper extensions, giving it a touring car–inspired look rather than that of a typical compact EV. (Picture from: Carscoops)
Beneath the surface, Mugen’s most tangible contribution comes in the form of performance dampers developed with Yamaha, designed to improve handling precision and reduce vibrations. The chassis already sits lower and wider than its kei-car relative, giving it a planted stance to match its appearance. Yet, the electric motor remains unchanged, producing a modest 94 horsepower in Boost Mode. Honda attempts to inject some excitement through an Active Sound Control system that simulates engine noise and gear shifts, but the gap between what the car looks like and how it actually performs remains part of its unique charm. | b6ld9VJBExU | 2pBcQ0JN8i0 |
With its release set to begin in Japan in May 2026, followed by expansion into markets like Europe and Australia, the Super-Onesignals a wider global appeal—perhaps even a future in one-make racing series where its balanced chassis could truly come alive. It serves as a compelling reminder that in the electric era, performance isn’t defined solely by raw numbers, but also by character, design, and the emotion a car stirs long before the accelerator is pressed. *** [EKA | FROM VARIOUS SOURCES | CARSCOOPS ]
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Mugen’s Super-One Looks Like a Race Car, But It Isn’t Fast