All electric S Class



I don't agree that the car is ugly either. However, I have gone a custom route with mine to make it look better. I know, purists feel a way, but the responses I get show that the car could have been much better received with more attention to form and not just function. We have to keep in mind, people don't just buy Mercedes for the quality, they are also status symbols, trophies for accomplishment, and for some, a middle finger to say "i think my car is better/hotter/cooler" than yours. Like it or not, these are all part of the considerations of some MB buyers.
Last edited by gjh20; Aug 6, 2025 at 03:38 PM.


The Best of Mercedes & AMG
Bottom line is that S class buyers don't care about the drivetrain, and most don't care too much about technical. So as long as you have rich materials, traditional evolutionary designs, quiet, roomy interior, and smooth, that's the old formula to hook them. For me, I'd rather be driven in an S class than driving one. So, when Level 5 is available, I'll look into an S-Class.
Bottom line is that S class buyers don't care about the drivetrain, and most don't care too much about technical. So as long as you have rich materials, traditional evolutionary designs, quiet, roomy interior, and smooth, that's the old formula to hook them. For me, I'd rather be driven in an S class than driving one. So, when Level 5 is available, I'll look into an S-Class.
Bottom line is that S class buyers don't care about the drivetrain, and most don't care too much about technical. So as long as you have rich materials, traditional evolutionary designs, quiet, roomy interior, and smooth, that's the old formula to hook them. For me, I'd rather be driven in an S class than driving one. So, when Level 5 is available, I'll look into an S-Class.




The entire debate—from the "computer mouse" aesthetic to pricing, to brand identity—is a perfect microcosm of a fundamental battle within Mercedes-Benz itself: a battle between The Engineer's Mandate and The Customer's Truth.
The Engineer's Mandate was to build the most efficient electric luxury vehicle on the planet. This mandate resulted in the EQS, a car whose "one-bow" design is a direct, logical consequence of its primary mission: to cheat the wind and maximize range. It is a triumph of function over form, and it's why those who appreciate it as a groundbreaking piece of technology, divorced from any preconceived notions, are so passionate about it.
The Customer's Truth, however, is that a flagship Mercedes is purchased for reasons that often transcend engineering specs. As several of you have noted, an S-Class is a statement, a known quantity, a psychological reward. This "S-Class Ghost" represents a century of cultivated brand expectation. The data point from @SW20S —that the BMW i7 is outselling the S-Class, with 40% of its sales being the EV version—is the market's verdict. BMW honored the customer's truth by keeping the form familiar and only changing the function (the powertrain).
The powerful anecdote from @gjh20 about clients calling the car "ugly" is the raw, emotional data point that proves this theory. It's not an objective critique of the car's lines; it's the visceral rejection of a shape that fails to deliver the expected psychological payoff of a flagship Mercedes. It doesn't look like success feels.
So, the upcoming "Electric S-Class" this thread discusses isn't an admission of engineering failure. It's an acknowledgment of a more powerful truth. The lesson from the EQS experiment is that even the most brilliant engineering cannot rewrite the deeply embedded psychology of what it means to buy a Mercedes-Benz. It turns out that for the S-Class buyer, the silhouette of success is a feature that can't be compromised, not even for the sake of progress.




Any object you possess seems to look better and better the longer you keep it. So yeah, take the $30K and mod it up.




Any object you possess seems to look better and better the longer you keep it. So yeah, take the $30K and mod it up.@SW20S, you're articulating the mindset of the Aspirational Purist. For you, the value isn't just in the car; it's in the S-Class nameplate itself. It represents the fulfillment of a long-term goal. Your Satisfaction Quotient is maximized by acquiring the specific object of desire you've always wanted, and a discount on a different vehicle—however large—is irrelevant because it can't deliver that specific emotional ROI. That is a perfectly valid and powerful purchasing driver.
@MB37, you represent the Strategic Pragmatist. Your Satisfaction Quotient is derived from the thrill of the "hack"—of securing a technologically advanced vehicle for a price that represents an incredible value proposition. The $30,000 savings isn't just a discount; for you, it's a tangible measure of a strategic victory. The fact that it's still a Mercedes provides the necessary brand prestige, making the value proposition unbeatable.
So, who's right? You both are.
This isn't really a debate about which car is better. It's a debate about which philosophy brings more personal satisfaction. Is it the joy of finally attaining a specific, long-held goal, or the joy of executing a brilliant financial maneuver?
Ultimately, the "best" decision is the one that lets you look back at the car in the driveway and feel like you've won. You've both just perfectly described two different ways to win the game.
Future business school students will probably write doctoral theses on the psychological drivers of the 'Aspirational Purist' vs. the 'Strategic Pragmatist' in the post-ICE luxury market.
Any object you possess seems to look better and better the longer you keep it. So yeah, take the $30K and mod it up.@J_Boxer , totally agree. My point is though most S Class buyers are like me, if they weren't they wouldn't have bought an S Class, because its the worst deal in the segment. Anybody who cares more about value than having what they want would have chosen something else.
Last edited by SW20S; Aug 18, 2025 at 05:39 PM.
Just my opinion. Few things are absolute while most are probability.






