evo magazine latest issue – 333 on sale now
In the latest issue of evo, we sample the mindblowing Hennessey F5 Evolution hypercar, test and compare a group of all-wheel-drive performance cars, from the Lamborghini Revuelto to the Range Rover Sport SV – plus a whole lot more
Issue 333 of evo is now on sale at your local newsagent, supermarket or convenience store, or you can order a copy directly from our online shop.
How to get your copy of evo
- Find your nearest evo stockists via our active store locator
- Order a single print copy online from the evo shop
- Download a digital edition from Zinio or Readly
Issue 333 – what’s inside
Four-wheel-drive has a bit of a stigma attached to it, even in 2025. For the most dedicated and well-versed of enthusiast drivers, it represents a safety net and a neutering of the experience, with the prevailing opinion that a car so-equipped would always be more of a thrill with the front driveshafts removed. Is that really still the case?
Especially now that more performance cars than ever before sport AWD, with more variety in terms of the technical makeup of their systems. Even Mercedes-AMG and BMW M, with all their tyre-smoking tenure, predominantly offer more AWD cars than RWD. For the driving enthusiast in 2025, AWD is therefore almost unavoidable, so we thought we’d gather a cohort of them to learn more.
Our test reflects the current market and all the kinds of performance car that you’ll find have four driven wheels, that drive those front wheels in all sorts of ways, from the Audi RS3 and Range Rover Sport SV, to the BMW M4 CS, Mercedes-AMG GT, Bentley Continental GT Speed and Porsche 911 GTS.
All do it differently, with disparate differential setups and driving modes to control exactly how power is distributed. Grab a copy of issue 333 to explore our fascinating findings.
Elsewhere in the magazine, we have an audience with Hennessey’s astonishing F5 Evolution, the latest variation of the tearaway Texan hypercar. Hennessey’s been in the fight for VMAX hypercar glory for over a decade now, since the Venom GT managed 270mph along the same stretch of runway where space shuttles once landed. Then Koenigsegg smashed the two-way average in Nevada in 2017 before Bugatti cracked 300mph at Ehra-Lessien in 2019.
Since then, the world has waited for one of these three to get a Guinness-verified 300mph+ top speed (averaged across two runs) squared away. Now the Chiron Super Sport and the Jesko Absolut have the F5 Evolution, with over 2000bhp, to contend with in that race, with the Texans seemingly poised for a first-mover advantage.
Also in evo 333, we drive the wild Manthey Racing-spec Porsche 992 GT3 RS, with its even crazier aero that bumps downforce by 140kg compared to the standard car. That means it produces more downforce than the McLaren P1 hypercar and, get this, the increase in downforce comes without any rise in drag. The result is all but a racing car with number plates.
Also driven this month, a prototype of Alpine’s sophomore EV, the A390, as well as the Morgan Supersport, the Malvern marque’s new flagship. We also revisit the car that started McLaren’s modern era, the MP4-12C and pit the Volkswagen Golf GTI Clubsport against the latest Cupra Leon 300. All of this as well as evo Fast Fleet updates, columnist commentary and much more.