I think there is some truth to that.
They come out the the hot, "boy racer" model. Then the marketing dept says the racer model kinda put off the mainstream buyer and they could sell more. So they make a blander version (aka the 36, the regular car with a bodykit). The blander version sells well initially but then people accuse it of being boring. So at the end of the life of the blander version the marketing dept says, "The M3 needs to stand out. Give it some gills and fender flares (oddly like the boy racer they first said put off the mainstream). So the new model gets the bling.
And now we are onto the blander, mainstream appeal model. The one they use to hook in the older drivers. You are right that by the end of this cars run people will be longing for something unique and they will go back to making an M3 that kids will buy posters of.
They come out the the hot, "boy racer" model. Then the marketing dept says the racer model kinda put off the mainstream buyer and they could sell more. So they make a blander version (aka the 36, the regular car with a bodykit). The blander version sells well initially but then people accuse it of being boring. So at the end of the life of the blander version the marketing dept says, "The M3 needs to stand out. Give it some gills and fender flares (oddly like the boy racer they first said put off the mainstream). So the new model gets the bling.
And now we are onto the blander, mainstream appeal model. The one they use to hook in the older drivers. You are right that by the end of this cars run people will be longing for something unique and they will go back to making an M3 that kids will buy posters of.
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