NewsCoulomb, I think your criticism is well placed, and after reading the original article from Shahan, I can't help but wonder if he didn't test drive the Bolt from something he read? Pretty low quality review from someone who touts himself as "in the know" on EV's. He's not sure how he missed noticing that the Bolt comes to a complete stop? Clearly the article he made his test drive from didn't go into very much detail regarding regenerative braking and one-pedal driving. Like you, I get how some will be taken by the i3's style, after all, it is a BMW. I could probably even learn to like the teensy-weensy thing myself, complete with bicycle tires, but the expectations BMW has ingrained in me make it difficult to look at something with pushcart performance in the same way. I can't get my head around the fact that it is actually a BMW! There is just something wrong in my view about dropping 65K on a car that resembles, in both style and performance, the thing my wife uses to pickup groceries. I mean, spot-weld a handle on the back roof line and mount a carrying rack under the front nose and you hardly have a reason to leave it in the parking lot. Just push it through the front doors and start shopping. But thats just me, and it doesn't mean that there isn't lots to take note of with the i3, namely for me, exterior parts, frame and cockpit. If BMW would lose the REX and give it a 200+ all electric mile range, I would have bought one yesterday. The 2017 i3 might make a good comparison with the first Gen Leaf, but compared to the Bolt, the i3 is out of its league here.