Unveiled to the world half a decade ago, the MC20 marked the new beginning for Maserati, and as the world is struggling with the new normal, where crossovers are superheroes, this is the antithesis every car enthusiast needs. With its strikingly great styling, driver-focused interior, and quintessentially Italian performance, the MC20 has become every car enthusiast's newest favorite Italian supercar for the time being. Sadly, the MC20 range is gone and in its place lies its all-familiar successor, the MCPURA.
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| 2026 Maserati MCPURA Cielo |
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| 2026 Maserati MCPURA |
Available in both the hardtop coupe and the open-top Cielo roadster, the Maserati MCPURA picks up where the MC20 left off, with its familiar looks and performance more than enough to drive customers crazy, wishing they could get their hands on either this and the Cielo, both cost under 300 grand.
Like the MC20 it replaces, the MCPURA's styling draws inspiration from the ancient MC12, the comfortable side of the Ferrari Enzo from two decades ago. With looks that can softly kill, its aerodynamics are beyond expectations. Yes, that's a familiar story when the MC20 came a few years ago, except now, the front face has been slightly revised. That's it.
Step inside the interior and you are greeted with its driver-focused cockpit that gives drivers an impression of driving a racing car on the track. Although track-focused in spirit, it's a well-tailored accessory every gentleman should have, especially when it packs a premium sound system and a Maserati Connect feature for their daily driving comforts. That sounds flashy and cheesy, but this is all in the experience of being a high-value Italian sports car that separates the men from the boys.
The Cielo features a two-piece folding glass roof that takes 12 seconds to open or close, and it can turn opaque at the touch of a button. Sounds like a party piece, but the roof-folding mechanism adds 65kg of weight.
The MCPURA range still packs the 3.0L 6-cylinder twin-turbo Nettuno engine bolted to the middle at 90 degrees. It produces 630PS of power and 730Nm of torque, and while mated to an 8-speed DCT, the MCPURA can sprint from 0-100kph in 2.9 seconds and can go all the way to 325kph. This is a supercar performance the Italians can take pride in.


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