I haven't done an exhaustive comparison, but from my cursory understanding seems that their EV offerings here are about the least competitive in the market--unless they use fire-sale pricing I don't think they're going to move many of their EV trims.
The I6s, however, might be compelling. Anyone who likes the new body style enough might be interested.
I wonder how heavy the I6 trims are. With the longer wheelbase than and also wider than the LX platform... betting it's even heavier too... so... not sure if the I6 fuel savings minus losses from more mass is going to be an actual net gain for their fleet-wide average... which would kinda defeat the entire purpose of this whole change up.
Maybe shoulda just spent a few hundred million on a gen-4 5.7 hemi to squeeze out more MPG and reduce emissions there and been done with it, and maybe come up with a lighter/smaller platform base to put it in. Prior disclosures showed that most of the MPG gains from the I6 are actually from the start-stop system! ... which they could easily add to the Hemi offerings...
Makes no sense to go bigger + /heavier/...
And then to add insult to injury: calling it the world's first and only EV muscle car? Laughable and obvious lie. Pretty sure no one calls any EV a muscle car, and marketing doesn't make it so. Secondly, there's other offerings that are faster, so they're a day late and a dollar short already there too.
If this is the best Dodge can come up with, a CUV no one wants, and a bigger+heavier sedan platform that either yields minimal/no net gains or is in EV trim that can't compete... I think the coffin may be nearly sealed shut--and probably with screws not just nails.
It was fun while it lasted Dodge... too bad Dodge didn't just quit while on top but had to drag their name through the mud kicking and screaming like a poor loser on the way off the stage. I hope I'm wrong and they come up with something actually good and worthy of prior Dodge achievements, but it's not looking good.