Oldest source I could find: 1985 Nissan CUE-X - Concepts
Man I miss that aesthetic so much. Today’s style is just too bland for me.
Most cars in that era were insanely bland as well. And this particular image isn’t even from a production car, it’s a concept. If we are just looking at awesome exceptions from these days, then Honda E or Hyundai Ioniq 5 could make the list and you can actually buy and drive them.
Wow, a car stereo with a large display like that is surprisingly advanced for 1985! I wonder if this is really a CRT, or a multi-segment display made to look like one
It’s a segmented display. Color display on consumer computers was to expensive at the time. because of the limited memory you could either have high resolution or few colors and low resolution, and high resolution was required if you need text.
My guess is that all displays have fixed segments and warning lights that can only be turned on or of.
Nissan loved to cram technology in their cars. See for example the GTR-34 in the 90s that has a full size LCD and real-time readouts on it, which was very usfule to tuners, hence it’s prominence in the scene
I had a 1988 Buick Reatta with a CRT in it. Only had one color in it though… Green… Looked like a terminal from fallout. I miss that car.
This screams cyberpunk to me and I love it
Cyberpunk is the 2nd related aesthetic in Cassette Futurism page of the Aesthetics Wiki. There is some overlap.
Yeah! Vaporwave, outrun / synthwave, retrowave, … it’s a bit of mess. Genre categorization is only useful up to a point :).
That’s fucking awesome. I’d love that console right now but with updated technology.
Requiring an airbag in the wheel basically rules out cool looking wheels like this. Rest of the cluster is certainly possible but the car companies want to do touchscreens over buttons since it’s simpler to install and replace one big screen that pull all the wiring out for one button that stopped working
Everyone here is simping for the display, while this car had a CD player in 1985. Do you understand how wild that was?