
Many car owners are attracted to Xpeng Motors' advantages in power and intelligence. Take the Xpeng P7 as an example—its power performance is another major highlight. The reasons for Xpeng Motors' popularity are: Many car owners value Xpeng Motors' strengths in power and intelligence. For instance, the Xpeng P7's power performance stands out as a key feature. The role of the rear wheels: The four-wheel-drive version can continuously distribute torque between the front and rear wheels in a 0-100% range, with faster torque transfer between the axles. This enables all-weather traction control across various road conditions, attracting a large number of consumers based on power and intelligence alone.

To be honest, Xpeng's recent popularity is no fluke. I've personally test-driven the G9, and what impressed me most is its XNGP intelligent driving system—it can autonomously change lanes and overtake on elevated roads at night, as steady as an experienced driver. The 800V ultra-fast charging is another game-changer; you can gain over 200 km of range in the time it takes to drink a coffee—users swear by it. For urban commuters stuck in traffic, its automated parking system is a lifesaver, especially in tight spots—my wife, a novice driver, parks better than I do with it. The voice interaction is also stellar, understanding five or six consecutive commands without missing a beat, way more convenient than fiddling with a . Frequent OTA updates are the cherry on top, making the car feel brand new every few months—a major hit with tech-savvy younger crowds.

Back when I worked at the showroom, Xpeng buyers always came with their whole family. The main appeal was the low entry barrier – the P5 with lidar started around 200,000 yuan, about 70,000-80,000 cheaper than Tesla's equivalent configuration. Parents loved it for family outings – the rear seats had ample space and came with child seat reminders. My neighbor bought the P7 purely for its looks – the coupe styling with frameless doors turned more heads than some million-yuan sports cars. The range was solid too – he drove 400km back to his hometown with 15% charge remaining. The hassle-free after- service was key – free home charging station installation and maintenance credits for the first service. Nowadays domestic brands pack in features, but Xpeng really delivers on the actual user experience.

Among the new automakers, XPeng has a particularly positioning. Li Auto focuses on family SUVs, NIO goes for premium services, while XPeng directly doubles down on smart tech. Last year's commute mode can now remember 50 routes, predicting traffic lights when taking the same daily route. Even their flying car project isn't just for show - the AeroHT X2 will conduct test flights in Guangzhou next year. He Xiaopeng is also respected in programmer circles, hosting tech days in open-source communities where developers can directly tweak autonomous driving algorithms. When tech media tested City NGP during Shenzhen's evening rush hour, it achieved zero interventions over 11 km - such real-world performance speaks louder than advertising budgets.

Isn't the main reason ordinary families buy electric cars for hassle-free and cost-effective benefits? The rear-wheel-drive version of the XPeng P7i can run over 600 kilometers on a full charge. With off-peak electricity rates at home charging stations costing just 0.3 yuan per kWh, it works out to less than 5 cents per kilometer. Previously, driving a gasoline car cost me 1,200 yuan per month in fuel, but now my electricity bill tops out at 200 yuan. The features are genuinely useful—even the base model comes standard with a 360-degree camera and auto hold, making it extremely beginner-friendly. A friend of mine bought the previous-gen P7 last year, and it still retains about 70% of its value on the used car market, outperforming some joint-venture brands in terms of resale value. Plus, maintenance is straightforward—just replace the cabin air filter every 20,000 kilometers. Isn't it great to save money and take the kids to Chimelong for fun?

What do young people look for when a car? Either it's cool enough or fun enough! The Xpeng G6's interstellar design language hides LiDAR in the light strip, making friends ask if it's a concept car when you drive it out. On weekend camping trips, it can directly discharge power to cook hot pot, and the central control screen even supports karaoke—way more practical than a mobile power bank. My cousin modified his P7 with gaming seats and plays Genshin Impact while waiting, with a 34-inch AR-HUD projecting the battle scenes. The community operations also know how to have fun—Guangzhou owners gather with their modified cars, and official photographers take professional shots for free. This level of engagement is something traditional 4S stores just can't offer.


