2023 CES: New-vehicle unveilings
A look at upcoming vehicles unveiled in Las Vegas.
- Tweet
- Share
- Share
- More

Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares and Ram CEO Mike Koval with the 1500 Revolution BEV Concept.

Ram is looking to raise the bar in the electric pickup market with features such as an automated charger and the ability to follow a walking driver like a loyal dog.

BMW engineer Stella Clarke introduces the BMW i Vision Dee on stage in Las Vegas.

One of its parlor tricks? E Ink technology allows the car to display up to 32 colors on the fly.

The marque technology in Dee (Digital Emotional Experience) is a head-up display that projects information across the vehicle's windshield, expanding the field of view and creating a more immersive experience for the driver and passengers.

Preordering for the Sony Honda Mobility Afeela EV is expected to begin in the first half of 2025, and deliveries will start in the spring of 2026, says CEO Yasuhide Mizuno.

The Afeela will include Level 2 driver-assistance features for urban driving scenarios. Sony Honda Mobility said it plans to work on Level 3 autonomous driving capabilities.

The VW ID7, previously known as the ID Aero, is expected to go on sale in the U.S. next year with the brand's best battery range and will be imported from Germany.

In October, Peugeot CEO Linda Jackson promised that the company's vision of the future would arrive soon. True to her word, she introduced the electric Inception Concept in Las Vegas.

Peugeot says it is "profoundly redesigning the interior space, reshaping driving gestures around the next generation of the Peugeot i-Cockpit and creating new digital and physical experiences."

A new design direction? Seen on the floor of CES was the U.S. Postal Service's new mail truck entering service this year and built by Oshkosh Defense. Among the electric truck's advanced technology: air conditioning, air bags, automatic braking, backup cameras, blind-spot alerts and sensors in the front and rear bumpers.










