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KERIAN

Everyone has seen the wacky dance moves, frolicking girls, and strange costumes in “Gangnam Style”—if you haven’t, you might be the last person on earth—but underneath the low-budget-seeming window dressing is a tongue-in-cheek poke at the poseurs who aspire to live the wealthy lifestyle of the Gangnam district of Seoul. Celebrating the “Gangnam lifestyle” in a decidedly unclassy video, Psy is like the fleet-footed musical equivalent of Rodney Dangerfield’s new-money character in Caddyshack, set to an insanely catchy melody. So what’s this have to do with the redesigned 2014 Kia Forte sedan?

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MICHAEL SIMARI

Like Psy, Kia’s Forte is Korean, and it, too, focuses on richer horizons, although the car’s mission is more forthright. Kia quality and competitiveness have been improving steadily, and the 2014 Forte is yet another step forward. Visually, the streamlined, sleek body demands a double take and continues the winning streak of Kia’s design department, which is headed by newly installed Hyundai Motor Group president Peter Schreyer. The car’s longish wheelbase begets nice proportions and a roomy rear seat. The EX model we tested wore bright Abyss Blue paint and a handsome set of optional 17-inch aluminum wheels, both of which spiced things up further. And there’s an even better-looking Forte five-door on its way.

Big, Big, Big, Bigger-Displacement Style

The EX is the topmost of the two Forte trims. Besides bringing more standard equipment, it includes a 2.0-liter, direct-injected four-cylinder engine with 173 horsepower and 154 lb-ft of torque. (Base LXs get a weaker 148-hp, 1.8-liter four with port fuel injection.) A six-speed automatic is standard here but an option on the LX, where it supplants a six-speed manual. The zestier engine pulls well from low rpm and is mostly unobtrusive, but runs to redline return coarse noises. The transmission shifts smoothly, although the manual mode won’t challenge a dual-clutch gearbox for fun.

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MICHAEL SIMARI

The Forte is deceptively quick—the trip to 60 mph takes 7.4 seconds, beating the performances of the Chevrolet Cruze, Ford Focus, Hyundai Elantra, and Volkswagen Jetta (all with automatics) in a recent comparison test. (A Mazda 3 in that test tied the Kia’s time.) The Forte also smacks down the last turbocharged Dodge Dart we tested and is within 0.1 second of the manual Focus’s time. As for efficiency, the 24-mpg city and 36-mpg highway EPA ratings promise infrequent fill-ups, and we managed 25 mpg, despite lead-footing the Kia everywhere we went.

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Specifications

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Alexander Stoklosa
Online Editor
Alexander Stoklosa has been editing, writing, and reviewing cars for Car and Driver since 2010. Occasionally, he takes a subpar photograph or whips together a cheesy illustration to the chagrin of C/D’s art staff. More often he can be found taking needlessly contrarian positions in inter-office car debates.