Wonderbar:
Not sure, but I think I remember several RT members calling the Taycan a baby Panamera. No matter CGX, you have the correct image in mind. A slightly longer 992 with more aggressive styling.
Regarding the constant Tesla/Taycan debate, which I never ascribed to, the two cars are unmistakably different in appearance. One is an attractive sedan (IMHO) and the other is a truly modern and powerful looking sportscar.
I pointedly asked several Porsche representatives if the Taycan were designed as a Tesla beater. The consistent, and I believe honest, answer was no. The Taycan was designed as a Porsche first and foremost, and as a modern extension of Porsche models, engineering, race heritage and "soul". One high level marketing representative went out of his. way to credit Tesla for creating a revolutionary breakthrough in electric mobility, and that the Taycan would not have been at the Show today but for the innovative and clear success of Tesla.
One has stated numerous times that Tesla, as a company, is an innovator. The issue that one has relating with Tesla is with Musk and his desire for complete dominance over the company. He is doing more harm than good; however, that is the way he has operated for decades, even before PayPal. He has made strategic decisions that have put the company down technological deadends and the reason one believes the company is grossly overvalued.
Contrary to the musing of media, there will never be a Tesla-killing product. Instead, newer entrants into the EV space will nibble away at the fringes of Tesla's current market dominance. One has already written about Musk and how he destroyed the company's ability to earn abnormal rents through its pricing strategy. A vehicle is not a consumer electronics device and its price should not be reduced; normal depreciation already hampers the value of the vehicle especially when combined with an underlining loan that so many households require to fund a purchase. More sophisticated manufacturers price that price decrease from the experience or learning curve in its initial pricing models.
Finally, one found humor in a post about the new Volkswagen ID.3, where a poster was complaining that his Chrysler Pacifica minivan only had one OTA update over the past sixteen months while his Tesla had about twenty updates over the same timeframe. He had problems ascertaining that this isn't a benefit since Tesla is rolling less-developed product into the marketplace.