Having big boots to fill has become a recurring theme on this page, and fewer cars carry a greater weight of expectation than the re-imagining of Soichiro Honda’s life’s work.
The original NSX was the firm’s first supercar, the crowning achievement of a man who started a fledgling company selling motorcycles in the late 1940s, and who by the end of his life had created a machine capable of taking on the world’s greatest performance cars.
Given its cult-hero predecessor’s Japanese roots, it’s perhaps surprising that the new NSX was designed in America to serve as luxury wing Acura’s halo model.
Thankfully, it was under the supervision of a team that worked on the original project, and as a result the new car stays true to its ethos – down to the dark, subdued cabin and restrained exterior styling, which features none of the lairy spoilers or butterfly doors of its rivals, yet still manages to look hugely special.