Home » We Need A Name For Stubby, Inflated-Looking Automobiles So I’m Proposing ‘Pufferfish Cars’

We Need A Name For Stubby, Inflated-Looking Automobiles So I’m Proposing ‘Pufferfish Cars’

Puffer Top
ADVERTISEMENT

I like classifying things. I’m not exactly sure why, but taxonomy can be fun — at least when it’s being done for useless, foolish, and/or just stupid reasons. Luckily, I have a perfect useless and foolish taxonomical goal for today, and it’s an automotive one: There’s a class of car that, if my research is sound, has so far never been officially grouped into a coherent category. And yet these cars, different in many ways, nevertheless are all quite clearly related. They’re related by a specific set of aesthetic and physical design criteria — criteria that have less to do with size than proportion, overall shape, and a general look that seems to imply something inflated, kind of like what I always thought Aldous Huxley meant when he used the word “pneumatic” in Brave New WorldThis new category of car is called “Pufferfish.” Please allow me to introduce you to the world of Pufferfish cars.

Essentially, here are the necessary criteria for pufferfish cars, shown on one of the finest examples of the genre, an Audi A2:

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Puffer Criteria

Like all categorical criteria, there may be some examples that don’t quite hit all of these exactly, but like that judge said about dirty pictures, you’ll know a Puffer when you see it. The cars tend to be from the 1990s and up, they generally tend to be smaller cars but with an emphasis on space maximization, and, interestingly, they’re remarkably agnostic regarding brand status. There are Pufferfish cars built by premium brands as well as some of the cheapest cars ever made. Really, it’s kind of remarkable that way.

Let’s look at some examples of the category, which your intense, active minds are already likely forming as we speak:

ADVERTISEMENT

Pufferexamples

Look at that range: the cheapest car ever sold new, the Tata Nano, to Mercedes-Benz and Audi. That Taurus wagon definitely pushes the hood-to-body ratio rule, but it still has that overall inflated, sea creature feeling about it that I think keeps it in the Pufferfish camp. The Mercedes-Benz B-Class is a bit more subtle, but it has the look. The Xsara is a uniquely French take that pushes the proportions via inflating that greenhouse almost to a one-box design, but not quite. The Buick Encore I think may be my least favorite of these, because somehow it looks like the one least happy to be in this category, somehow. It should feel honored.

If you’re still having trouble getting on board with all this, maybe this will help — an example of a car that caused me some taxonomic difficulties here: the Renault Twingo.

Twingo

So, by most criteria, the Twingo should fit here: proportions, minimal overhangs, all that. But the Twingo is lacking the one crucial trait: it doesn’t really look inflated. Somehow, the Twingo maintains just a bit of leanness in its look that keeps it out of the Pufferfish camp. It doesn’t look like it’s about to burst; it’s in a balance of tension there in a way that Puffers are not. Puffers give the sense that the pressure inside them is greater than outside them.

ADVERTISEMENT

Does this make sense? [Ed Note: Sure, in a Torchtopian sort of way I guess. -DT]. I’d love to hear your thoughts and what other examples you come up with. I’m fond of this peculiar category of car. It’s slipped under the radar, for the most part, but I think it’s high time we take a moment and recognize these bouncy members of the greater automotive landscape.

Let’s hear it for the Pufferfish!

Relatedbar

The Tiny Rear Wipers On Modern Cars Are Pathetic But I Have A Solution

Regulations Made The US Version Of The New Morgan Super 3 Have A Spider Face

A Professional Car Designer Explains What Makes The Honda e So Wonderful

It’s Time To Stop Sharing That Meme With All The White SUVs Because It’s Wrong And Stupid

 

Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on whatsapp
WhatsApp
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on reddit
Reddit
Subscribe
Notify of
117 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Jakob Johansen
Jakob Johansen
1 year ago
Freelivin2713
Freelivin2713
1 year ago

Yes, it does make sense…doesn’t mean I have to like it! Ha ha…the Twingo should get the exception

Mr Sarcastic
Mr Sarcastic
1 year ago

How about Clostridium Botulinium? That is what causes cans containing bad meat to pork out when contamination gets bad.

None None
None None
1 year ago
John Verlautz
John Verlautz
1 year ago

My wife calls our C-Max a Zamboni, but more for the turning radius than the shape.

I feel like it’s more a micro-minivan. Two rows only. Like either AMC Pacer, hatchback or wagon. Mazda had the Mazda5, Dodge had the Colt Vista, and there was a Corolla too, what was that called?

Ana Osato
Ana Osato
1 year ago

Elephant skates

Bruno Hache
Bruno Hache
1 year ago

And if it’s a Japanese car it’s a Fugu car! Lol ????

sentinelTk
sentinelTk
1 year ago
Reply to  Bruno Hache

Poison. Poison. Tasty Fish.

117
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x