Very few cars inspire the kind of instant, childish, gleeful excitement that the best supercars do.
While thirty years ago, powerful mid-engined exotics were much rarer sights on UK roads, today their greater prominence only seems to give them greater reach and impact. You see them more often, but still really notice when you do.
The technical definition of this kind of car has become a little fluid over the last few years, but essentially they aim to combine exotic and singularly purposeful looks, with kidney-crushing performance and physics-testing handling, at a price that shouldn’t mean that only billionaires need apply. This isn’t where you’ll find million-pound hypercars ranked, then; instead, those slightly more accessible dream machines that only cost the price of an average three-bed semi-detached house.
The route to outright performance has changed in these cars, too, with everything from pure ICE machines to plug-in hybrids in the mix. There’s also still a surprisingly wide array of engine layouts, as turbo V6s jostle with atom V10s and flat-crank V8s for combustive supremacy.
Even so, to take top honours in this class a contender will have to demonstrate a remarkable breadth of ability; because unlike the even more focussed hypercars, these models have to be able to cope with day-to-day duties, with owners often keen to use their purchases for more than just high-days and holidays.
Read on, then, as we reveal the supercars that cause us to issue the most superlatives.
Top ten best supercars
There were a few Ferrari fans that fretted over the demise of the old F8 Tributo, the last pure ICE mid-engined machine to bear the prancing horse badge. Surely it’s a replacement, a plug-in hybrid off all things, would be a soulless shadow of its predecessor? Erm no, not by a long shot.
While the ferociously quick but slightly spiky SF90 Stradale represented a toe-in-the-water exercise for the firm's plug-in powertrains, the smaller and less costly (relatively speaking, because it's still a £250,000 car) 296 GTB is sensationally well executed and goes straight to the top of the supercar charts.
It’s so good that you wonder why you worried the folks at Maranello might have got it wrong.
At the heart of the car is a new twin-turbocharged 3.0-litre V6 engine that's mated to a 164bhp electric motor to deliver a staggering combined total of 819bhp - in what's essentially an 'mid-ranking' Ferrari.
As you would expect, performance is relentlessly, savagely sensational, plus it will also crack a claimed 15.5 miles of electric-only range. More importantly, the ICE feels and sounds as special as any that has had crackle red painted applied to its cam covers, responding with zeal to every input and emitting a howl that has you convinced that it packs twice as many cylinders.
What's more remarkable is that Ferrari has managed to make a car with this much power and performance potential feel so approachable and engaging.
The trademark wristily quick steering is still perhaps a little too over-eager to help you change direction, but the car's mid-corner balance, control and poise beggars belief.
This is a machine that's as happy to play a neat-and-tidy game of hunt-the-apex as it is to hang it all out. It's packed with driver assistance systems and various modes, but the 296 GTB always feels natural and on your side.
It's a remarkable supercar, and one that shows that increasing levels of electrification don't necessarily mean diminishing driver rewards.
Read our Ferrari 296 GTB review
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Slightly biased review imho... 3 McLarens and another British car that hasn't even hit the market yet?None of the Porsche 911?Ferrari F8 tributo?Audi R8
"old school approach" "six-speed manual gearbox, plus there's no anti-lock braking, traction control or airbags" is a rather noble way to commit suicide