In Case 1,700 Horsepower Wasn’t Enough, The Koenigsegg Gemera Grand Tourer Will Also Reportedly Be Available With 2,300 Horsepower

Koenigsegg Gemera Topshot
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With a new special edition Lamborghini or one-off Ferrari coming out seemingly every five seconds, it can be hard to keep track of everything going on in the upper echelon of our hobby and even easy to become a bit jaded. However, when Koenigsegg has something new, I pay attention. The production version of the Koenigsegg Gemera grand tourer has been reportedly unveiled at a private event and the Koenigsegg Registry reports that it will come with a second engine option.

While the standard three-cylinder hybrid powertrain pumps out 1,700 horsepower [Editor’s Note: Seeing the words “three cylinder” by the number “1,700 hp” makes me feel funny in the netherwhatsits – JT], ticking the box for the twin-turbocharged V8 makes the Gemera good for 2,300 horsepower on E85. It almost sounds like a fake number, something so astronomical that it cannot possibly be correct, but it actually tracks. Koenigsegg’s Tiny Friendly Giant turbocharged triple that comes standard in the Gemera is rated for 600 horsepower and when combined with three electric motors, total system output is 1,700 horsepower. Koenigsegg built its name on ludicrously potent V8s with four figures of power, so a combined system output of 2,300 horsepower makes sense, as absurd as that sounds.

Koenigsegg Gemera 2

Granted, such absurd power does come with absurd cost. To get the V8 upgrade, you’re reportedly looking at a premium of $400,000 over a standard Gemera, or $666.66 per extra pony. Nice. Oh, and the V8 comes attached to Koenigsegg’s Light Speed Transmission, a nine-speed affair that simulates a gated manual with a clutch in the CC850.

Koenigsegg Gemera 3

While the V8 is certainly a flex, Koenigsegg touts a cruising range of 621 miles with the three-cylinder engine plus an all-electric range of 30 miles, which sounds a lot more usable than 2,300 horsepower. Then again, “usable” isn’t an adjective normally used to describe a seven-figure hyperexotic, but this is Koenigsegg we’re talking about. Nothing it makes is conventional.

Koenigsegg Gemera Interior

Another noteworthy change coming to the Koenigsegg Gemera is the use of actual mirrors instead of cameras. While this is due to U.S. regulations not permitting the use of side-view camera mirrors, it’s worth celebrating because camera mirrors are invariably terrible. Also available on the production car is the Ghost Package, an aggressive aerodynamic kit with a huge rear wing, larger front spoiler, extra ducting, and other bits that has the side effect of completely deleting the frunk. While I’m sure this package will pay dividends on track, the Gemera is so attractive without the extra adornment that going full aggro will only be for the brave few.

Koenigsegg Gemera 4

As weird as it sounds, the Gemera will be the closest thing in existence to a mass-produced Koenigsegg. The brand plans to build 300 of these insane grand tourers in an expanded factory, which means you might actually see one in real life outside the confines of exotic car shows. First deliveries are expected in 2025, and you best believe that I’m stoked to hear tales of these things out in the wild.

(Photo credits: Koenigsegg)

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21 thoughts on “In Case 1,700 Horsepower Wasn’t Enough, The Koenigsegg Gemera Grand Tourer Will Also Reportedly Be Available With 2,300 Horsepower

  1. Gemera! Gemera!
    Gemera is really neat!

    Is it a friend to all children?
    Any word if it’s full of meat?

    (Someone here is gonna get this joke)

    1. That is in fact exactly what they are, in the announcement video they touted that the cupholders are both heated and cooled so you can have iced drinks next to cold drinks and both will stay at the temperature you want them to.

  2. But it seems to me that it actually uses cameras instead of mirrors. Are the mirrors “standard” and the camera ones an “option”? Between quotes because it is strange what we can consider standard and option in a car like this.

  3. While I get what Thomas and others are saying, I wholeheartedly disagree that in the real world, where real cars are dirty, obstructed, filled, used…. camera mirrors are actually worse.

    Camera mirrors don’t become literally useless when you need to fold in a tight space. Camera mirrors don’t become useless when your rear hatch is tiny/nonexistent, or filled with shit.
    Camera mirrors shockingly do better at dealing with rain (when placed properly), and even better at salt or dirt.

    Side mirrors on many modern cars are also way too small to be really useful.

    Now… obviously in an ideal world you have both systems, easily usable by the driver, used when the situations for each are most applicable…. but if I had to have 0 mirrors and a good set of cameras or a good set of mirrors and no cameras, give me cameras 365 days a year and twice on fridays.

  4. The only hypercars worth caring about are Koenigseggs. The fact that they’re actually making several hundred is even better. I’m so over seeing “only 25 will be built and they were all sold to a prince already”.

    1. Can’t wait for a wrecked Gemera to pop up in a salvage auction and get the hybrid parts ripped out because even with just the TFG it’s still a ridiculously fast car…

  5. I have had the great pleasure to be at the Koenigsegg factory on two separate occasions, one of which included a full factory tour. It is an amazing place. Compact and efficient, especially considering they make as much as they can in house. I have huge respect for Christian Koenigsegg. He and his wife are lovely, approachable people. What an amazing company he has built. Also the cars are bonkers amazing. I’ll never be able to afford one, but if I had to have a hypercar, any of the Koenigseggs ticks the box.

  6. I agree with you about the looks but I’m kind of thinking that by the time you hit 2300 horsepower looks may not be as important as all that extra aero, if you want to drive this thing twice.

  7. 2’300 HP?! $666.66 per extra pony?!
    At a rate of one pony per second that gives me roughly 40 minutes of bowel emptying, laugh-crying bliss before it kills me.
    Sorry about the nightmares first responders.
    This isn’t a car. It’s a high end suicide booth.
    I regret nothing! See you in hell fuckos!

    1. “Seems like a good way to scare the living crap out of three friends.

      But… you can also do that with a rusted out Dodge Neon”

      Not necessarily. I’ve had friends whose youthful sense of invunerability had them gleefully bombing about country back roads at triple digit speeds in a clapped out, former dumpster of a Datsun 510 on four bald bias ply tires and an unmuffled ~150 HP L18SSS Japanese police car engine.

      Darwin be damned, somehow they lived.

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