2023 Hyundai Ioniq 6 teased with streamlined objects

The next step in Hyundai’s electrification has started with the follow-up to the fantastic Ioniq 5. This sedan, called the Ioniq 6, has been teased for the first time in a 36-second video called Silhouette of a New Era. It hints at the car’s non-traditional shape, which is likely done to optimize its aerodynamic performance. The 2023 Hyundai Ioniq 6 is based on the Prophecy Concept first shown in 2020. Although it won’t be as dramatic as the show car, expect the production model to take a lot of cues.

Hyundai’s teaser video starts with a child looking at a magazine and admiring a bike with an aerodynamic design. It then switches to a simple yet elegant lounging chair before transitioning to mountains with clouds flowing over it and smoke revealing a black stone. Finally, it shows a curved building made of glass with a sphere inside it.

2023 Hyundai Ioniq 6 teased with streamlined objects

All of these shapes point to the Ioniq 6 ditching the typical three-box sedan design that’s been so common for so long. It will be the latest four-door to switch to something less conventional, putting it on the same boat as the Mercedes-Benz EQS and EQE sedans. One big difference is while the two Mercedes vehicles still have a somewhat traditional rear deck lid, the Hyundai will not. Its rear end will sweep down dramatically, resembling something closer to what you’d find in the Saab 9000 and 9-3 Viggen but more curvaceous.

The Ioniq 6 is the second Hyundai vehicle on the company’s E-GMP architecture dedicated specifically to battery-electric vehicles. Unlike the concept it’s based on, the production model appears to have been shrunken down, putting it closer to a compact sedan in size. This also places the Ioniq 6 squarely against its chief rival, the Tesla Model 3. However, the Ioniq 6 will be smaller than the upcoming Volkswagen Aero B, which is closer to a midsize sedan.

Expect the Ioniq 6 to have the longest driving range out of all the E-GMP-based vehicles. Between being lower to the ground and aerodynamic shape, it has the potential to go more than 300 miles between charges in both single- and dual-motor configurations with the 77.4-kWh battery.

Like the Ioniq 5, the Ioniq 6 should have 225 hp and 258 lb-ft of torque in the rear-drive single-motor guise. The more powerful dual-motor variant with AWD should make 320 hp and 446 lb-ft.

One big differentiator in the Ioniq 6 will be the availability of two performance-oriented variants. The first one is the N Line, which slots neatly between the standard model and the full-fledged N variant. It gets extensive suspension tweaks, summer performance tires on 20-inch wheels, and more power than the standard dual-motor car. Expect this to borrow the same configuration found in the Genesis GV60 Performance, which makes 429 hp and 446 lb-ft or up to 483 hp and 516 lb-ft for about ten seconds when you activate Boost mode.

Slotting at the top of the lineup will be the Ioniq 6 N, the most potent member of the family. Expect this to get all of the go-fast goodies from the Kia EV6 GT and the upcoming Ioniq 5 N. That means nearly 600 hp from the two electric motors, a limited-slip differential, an electronically-controlled suspension, and N-specific performance tires. When it debuts later this year, the standard versions of the 2023 Hyundai Ioniq 6 N will arrive first followed by the N Line and full N models.

By Chad Kirchner

Chad is the VP of Content for EV Pulse, and other Wrecked Media Group properties. He has years of experience covering the automotive industry and has been featured in Truck Trend, The Drive, Overland Journal, AutoGuide, Automotive Map, and other places.