Car News

The Fiat Topolino is a vibe, especially in these new special editions

The ‘Sport’ spec isn’t really sporty, but hey, it’s cute
Front quarter view of the Fiat Topolino Sport Special Edition in white
PHOTO: Fiat

The little Fiat Topolino has barely birthed and we’re already into special-edition territory. In the latest markets it’ll enter (not the Philippines, sadly), Verdevita and Corallo are the main shades—teal green and coral red, respectively. After that, you’re into the new versions.

First up is the Sport Special Edition, designed to appeal primarily to the ‘younger audience’ and draw inspiration from the Nuova Sport 500 of 1958, apparently.

Front quarter view of the Fiat Topolino Sport Special Edition in yellow

Front quarter view of the Fiat Topolino Sport Special Edition in various colors

The marketing flim-flam talks of ‘unmistakably dynamic presence,’ but that consists of...colors and stripes. So that’s white with a red stripe, blue with white stripes, yellow with black stripes, and black with red stripes. Unmistakable.

OTHER STORIES YOU MIGHT HAVE MISSED:
The hybrid Hyundai Staria is now in PH and it starts at P1.999-M
Size comparo: How big is the BYD Atto 2 EV versus the Jaecoo J5 EV?

Then there are black headlight frames (woah), matte-black painted wheels, black mirror caps, and Sport badges. Inside, there are black seats and a dash-top box (called the ‘Dolcevita Box’) wrapped in carbon-effect vinyl, and a new type of seatbelt. But the mechanicals remain the same—so the Sport is sporty in name only.

Front quarter view of the Fiat Topolino collab with Vilebrequin

Rear view of the Fiat Topolino collab with Vilebrequin

Perhaps more interesting—at least visually—is the collab with French seaside firm Vilebrequin, which gets white over blue as an exterior colorway, a cloth sunroof, and the company’s signature turtle embroidered all over the dash box. But you’ll struggle to get one since there will only be 200, all bound for Italy and France.

As a background, it’s called the Topolino (‘little mouse’) and, if you’re old enough, conjures images of endlessly cool Italians barging about the sweaty parts of Rome, smoking filterless cigarettes and wearing big sunglasses. After all, the Topolino originally landed in 1936 and looked like a toy—and was one of the smallest cars in the world when it was launched.

Front quarter top view of the Fiat Topolino collab with Vilebrequin

But the Fiat 500 (1957 to 1975) is the one that most remember—irrepressibly tiny, still bursting with big small-car energy. It wasn’t small because you couldn’t afford a bigger vehicle, but because it suited Italy’s medieval streets. And now there’s a new one.

It’s still small (only just over 2.5 meters long, 1.5 meters wide) and still has that innocent face and slightly cartoony look, but this time it’s the spearhead of Fiat’s micromobility attack. Yes, it’s based on the same platform and general look of the sister car Citroen Ami, but there are a few Fiat twists. Not all of them positive.

Front quarter view of the Fiat Topolino Sport Special Edition in yellow

But let’s get to the basics. The plastic body is mirrored front to back and side to side for ease of repairability. That means—like the Ami—the Topolino looks a little push-me-pull-you, plus the doors are literally the same moulding, so the driver’s door is a suicide style, while the passenger is conventional, all the hinging points being identical.

Inside, there are two seats that consist of padding on a plastic sliding base, a bar of a dash with some storage on the top under a baguette of material, a simple driver’s display, and a phone holder. That’s about it. Very easy to clean, if nothing else, but it’s pared back to absolute austerity.

Dashboard of the Fiat Topolino collab with Vilebrequin

Underneath, there’s a 7.4kWh battery that only has 5.5kWh of usable capacity, allied to an 8hp motor driving the rear wheels. That’s good enough for zero to top speed in 10sec, although because this little urbanite only manages 45kph all-out, you’ll get murdered by scooters at the lights. One gets the feeling with both this and the Ami that it needed a little more off-the-line punch to be really useful in traffic. As it is, you feel like you’re always getting in everyone’s way.

It also handles like a pram, rides like a shopping trolley, and has no air-conditioning or HVAC apart from a mount for a handheld fan. The square tube of the frame has sealant all around the joins, and some of the welds look like I did them. Blindfolded. And drunk. And I can’t weld. By most objective accounts, it’s a bit rubbish.

Front quarter view of the Fiat Topolino Sport Special Edition in blue

And yet, if you’re doing a very specific amount of commuting between, say, here and just over there, popping to the shops or bimbling around tight city streets at brisk walking pace, the Topolino has what the kids call ‘vibes.’ It’s not fun, but it puts a smile on people’s faces, feels humble, and fits with the friendly aesthetic. And you can take the doors off and replace them with thick ropes. Which is probably a thing in Nice and Antibes, less so in the more sketchy parts of town.

Honestly, though, it’s a car with some character, again like the Ami. You can park it anywhere, bounce the doors off walls (the panels are all dyed-in-the-mass, so scratches don’t really show), charge it up from a normal wall plug in four hours from a cable that lives permanently in the doorjamb. There are magnetic ‘Monster’-branded speakers that are supposed to stick to the metal frame (ours fell off within a pair of seconds and then lived on the dash), which provide surprising, tinkly soundtracks.

Front quarter view of the Fiat Topolino Sport Special Edition in yellow

There’s a rear luggage rack that feels like a ’60s accessory, and a few different colors. Although they’ll come out in a staggered series, seeing as the cars aren’t painted—as mentioned, they’re a singular color in the plastic, so the various shades will appear once a quarter. So it’s fun, fresh, and very low-impact.

Pricing in the UK is an interesting one: £8,995 (around P743,000) straight up, which is cheap for a car, expensive for an L7 quadricycle that doesn’t do much more than a scooter other than keep you dry. More for the special editions. In Europe, you can rent one of these things for €39 (P2,750) a month, though there was no mention of the deposit.

If that’s the case in the UK, a Topolino would be a nicer option than the Tube or a Honda Cub on a wet Tuesday morning, but it’s a narrow and very urban use case. For those who can use it as intended, it’ll be grand. But here, they’ll be few and far between, even in cities.

More photos of the special-edition Fiat Topolino:

Front quarter view of the Fiat Topolino Sport Special Edition in white with red stripes

Front quarter view of the Fiat Topolino Sport Special Edition in blue

Roof of the Fiat Topolino collab with Vilebrequin

Front quarter view of the Fiat Topolino collab with Vilebrequin

NOTE: This article first appeared on TopGear.com. Minor edits have been made.

See Also

View other articles about:
PHOTO: Fiat
  • TGP Rating:
    /20

    Starts at ₱

    TGP Rating:
    /20
    Starts at ₱