I actually like that it isn't a 300. It's smaller and cheaper. I think it'll be a big hit. LC enthusiast may not like it. People who like the allure of Land Cruiser but aren't actually Land Cruiser enthusiast will love it. People still love FJ cruises🤣
I particularly like that it's narrower. It's nearly as narrow as the 80 series and now shares the same wheelbase, which, for my purposes, is dimensionally ideal. I look forward to seeing track width too. I'm eager to park one of our 80s next to the 250 to spend an hour on the ground comparing the two and trying to drink a beer laying down.
We should keep in mind that the TNGA-F platform will make Toyota's offerings more similar than different going forward. I expect that, with the exception of 70 series, the stark differences that have historically distinguished models will blur. I expect that TNGA-F platform will increase robustness across models.
On the other hand, Toyota Global
did launch the 250 as "Light Duty," a subfamily of Land Cruiser to which Prado belonged and the 200 and 300 did and do not. The press release benchmarks the 250 against the outgoing Prado.
https://global.toyota/en/newsroom/toyota/39526684.html
How this shakes out with the 250's big metal parts will be very interesting to see. I was encouraged by reports from the reveal that it appears to share axels with the 300. And I am certain that Toyota itself was mindful of inevitable benchmarking in the U.S. against the robustness of its past U.S. Land Cruiser offerings.
A big tell for me will be payload. Payload of the 80 series began at 1930 lbs, fell into the 1700s as more luxury bits were added where it stayed through the 100 series, and then it fell further with the 200 series, whose run ended in the 1600 and 1500 lb range.
What's
very encouraging for the 250 specifically and the TNGA-F platform generally is that the 2024 Tacoma offroad hybrid, even with all of the weight of the battery, still sees a payload over 1700 lbs (again, more than the outgoing 200 series).
Anyhow, again, it'll be interesting to see specs. To be sure, things now are not as they were.