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Ford, Dodge and Chevy all offer V6 editions of the brand’s muscle cars, but these are tailored more towards the pedestrian than performance. That leaves Hyundai and Nissan. SEE ALSO: 2016 Nissan 370Z Review. For just a hair over 30 grand after destination charges, a base Nissan 370Z or Hyundai Genesis Coupe 3. 8 R-Spec can be acquired. Both cars come with big V6 engines, rear-wheel drive and a proper six-speed manual transmission. Get the Flash Player to see this player. The steering effort in the 370Z is lighter than the Hyundai’s, but as speeds build, it firms up and plenty of feedback from the road is transmitted to the driver’s hands. SEE ALSO: 2014 Hyundai Genesis Coupe Ultimate Review. But the lack of performance goodies does catch up with the 370Z. It can’t put the power down coming out of a corner the same way the Genesis can, since it’s missing the LSD. And the standard brakes on the Nissan don’t inspire much confidence during hard stops. Source: www.autoguide.com