Today's super-GT inherits a legacy forged and refined over a century of sports car making, through front-engined, rear-wheel-drive legends such as the pre-war Alfa Romeo 8C and the likes of the Jaguar E-Type, Aston Martin DB4, Ferrari 250 and Mercedes-Benz 300 SL ‘Gullwing’. No other part of the performance car market has better pedigree.
These are cars intended for the idyllic, high-speed continent-crossing missions of your waking dreams.
They’re ‘have your cake and eat it’ cars, with excellent touring manners and plenty of space for your luggage, often with a couple of occasional back seats included.
But the very best combine all that with absolutely first-order speed, power, handling poise and driver engagement, or, alternatively, limousine-like luxury, as you prefer.
1. Aston Martin DBS Superleggera
If there’s one marque you’d expect to get the execution of a luxurious, powerful and beautiful super-GT bang on the money, it’s Aston Martin. And with the latest DBS Superleggera, that’s exactly what the iconic British brand has done.
This new flagship model (at least until the Valkyrie hypercar arrives) was one of a small handful of cars to be awarded the full five-star rating by our road test team in 2018. It’s an impressively well-rounded car, this one. The 715bhp and 664lb ft developed by its 5.2-litre twin-turbocharged V12 allows the DBS to cover ground with alarming and gathering urgency, and yet even with all that performance punch, the big Aston never feels intimidating, nervous or highly strung - something that can’t be said of the Ferrari 812 Superfast. Superb handling and a ride that’s taut but still usefully supple add to its outstanding grand touring credentials.
There are a few (minor) flies in its ointment, though. It’s not exactly lightweight (despite what the Superleggera name might lead you to believe) and the eight-speed gearbox can be a bit aggressive at low speeds. The cabin is also a mite too similar to that of the considerably cheaper DB11 to effortlessly distinguish this quarter-million-pound sporting flagship as well as it might.
Even so, this is a phenomenal car, available in both coupé and Volante-badged convertible forms, that represents a welcome return to form for a much-loved British car maker.

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2. Aston Martin DB11 AMR
That Aston Martin has laid claim to the top two spots on this list is a testament to the success of Messrs Palmer (now former CEO) and Co in turning the fabled British car maker from a slightly old-fashioned brand into a genuine force in exotic car making, at least from the perspective from the driver's seat.










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I’ve always loved how these cars aren’t just about speed, but about how you feel after five hours behind the wheel, relaxed, not wrecked. The DBS and Continental GT especially feel like they respect the idea that humans aren’t machines. Real trips involve comfort, luggage, music, and good tires matter more than people admit. Funny enough, reading owner feedback (even sites like simple tire) reminds you how practical details shape ownership.
Taycan and McLaren 'GT' are not GTs... auto journalism is truly in the toilet
Now if only you could get a Roma with a Bentley interior and an Aston V12 under the hood... :P