Yes, rrocket, I do realize there are a lot of reviews out there that complements the car in all those aspects, but the fact is, I didn't go to the testdrive with a huge expectation with driving dynamics. I didn't expect it to be a Celica replacement. To put it into perspective, the car I testdrove before the Scion was the new Legacy 6spd manual, base model. Relatively speaking, the steering feel between the two is about the same. However, the manual driving experience on that one is much much better. Shift throw and feel are similar, but clutch take up was precise, and get this, zero rev hang issue! (Yet, the Impreza manual has huge rev hang issue. No clue why.) I test drove a lot of new manual cars in the recent years, and have to say that was a rare treat. Funny when I read the reviews for the Subaru, much of it was opposite to my experience. Then again, I often take reviews with a grain of salt. Most reviews focus too much on value, interior space, styling, etc, but very little is dedicated to the driving dynamics. Many new manual cars have rev hang in various severity, but how often do u see that mentioned in a professional review? I believe throttle calibration on a manual car is fundamental. Any bit of rev hang is just going to ruin the experience. If a Legacy can pull it off without the dreadful rev hang, why can't others do that? Excuses because it's an emission control side effect? And what? The Legacy isn't low emission? Do car engineers even bother testing their own cars anymore? Just 10min around the block, that's all it takes.
As with steering feel, I found cars that offer great feel at the handling limit, may not necessary mean they are good at commuter speed. And vice versa. I assessed the Scion as a sporty daily commuter. Maybe it feels better at the limit?
Arctic white, let us know what u think of the car if u get a chance to test the manual tC.