Next Generation Fails: Learn From Mistakes - CarInteriorMix

Next Generation Fails: Learn From Mistakes - CarInteriorMix

By Derek Muller ยท

Next Generation Fails: Learn From Mistakes

Every time a ?next-gen? interior drops, our group chats light up. Some of us are hyped for the new screens, new materials, new vibes. Others immediately zoom in on the stuff that got worse: the creaky piano black, the touch-everything controls, the ?why is the seat fabric itchy?? moments. And honestly? That tension is kind of the fun of being an interior nerd.

Let?s treat this as a community hang, not a lecture. ?Next generation fails? doesn?t mean the whole car is a disaster?it?s more like those design choices that feel like a step backward. The good news: we can actually learn a lot from what didn?t land, and we can help each other spot patterns before we buy, mod, or defend our favorite brand in the comments.

So here?s the discussion: when a new model?s interior misses the mark, what should we do with that information? There are a few different ways to look at it?and depending on your priorities, you might land in a totally different camp than your friends.

1) ?Keep It Simple? Crew: Buttons, Knobs, and Muscle Memory

Key characteristics: Physical controls for common tasks (HVAC, volume), clear labels, less menu-diving, minimal touch sliders.

Pros:

Cons:

Works best for: Daily commuters, families, and anyone who cares about ease-of-use more than showroom wow factor.

Community voice: ?I test-drove the new model and spent half the time hunting for the defrost button in a submenu. In winter. In traffic. I?m not built for that.? ? Jared, 2018 hatchback owner

2) The ?Screen-First? Optimists: Let the Software Mature

Key characteristics: Big center displays, over-the-air updates, digital clusters, simplified dashboards with fewer physical controls.

Pros:

Cons:

Works best for: Early adopters, tech-lovers, and folks who don?t mind a learning curve if the design feels fresh.

Community voice: ?Everyone roasted the new infotainment at launch, but two updates later it?s actually solid. I?d rather have a screen that improves than a cabin that looks stuck in 2012.? ? Mina, crossover lease-hopper

3) Material Realists: ?It?s Not Luxury If It Scratches When You Look at It?

Key characteristics: Debates over piano black, glossy plastics, thin leatherette, ?sustainable? fabrics, and cost-cutting disguised as minimalism.

Pros:

Cons:

Works best for: Buyers who keep cars long-term, detailers, and anyone who notices wear patterns after 10,000 miles?not just on delivery day.

Community voice: Picture this: You buy the next-gen model, love it for a week, then your keys lightly graze the center console and the finish marks permanently. Now you?re either living with it? or you?re down the rabbit hole of wraps, PPF, and trim swaps.

4) The Ergonomics Crowd: Seats, Sightlines, and Storage Over Hype

Key characteristics: Seat comfort, bolstering, lumbar support, steering wheel feel, visibility, cupholder placement, and usable storage.

Pros:

Cons:

Works best for: Road-trippers, taller drivers, rideshare folks, and anyone whose back has strong opinions.

5) The Mod-and-Fix Mindset: ?The Factory Missed, We Can Improve It?

Key characteristics: Aftermarket solutions?steering wheel retrims, alcantara wraps, console protectors, upgraded lighting, sound deadening, and even swapping touch controls for physical add-ons where possible.

Pros:

Cons:

Works best for: Tinkerers, DIYers, and anyone who sees a flawed interior as a project, not a dealbreaker.

Quick Poll: Where Do We Land?

If a next-gen interior has one major ?fail,? what do we do?

Let?s Talk: What?s the Biggest ?Next-Gen Fail? We Keep Seeing?

Is it the disappearance of physical controls? The glossy trim that scratches if you breathe on it? The cost-cutting that shows up in door cards and armrests? Or are we being too harsh because we remember the older interiors through rose-tinted sunglasses?

Drop your experience in the comments?what car (and what generation) disappointed you the most inside, and what would you tell the designers if they were sitting with us at a meet? What?s the one interior mistake you hope the next ?next-gen? finally stops repeating?