12 Autos JAPONESES PROHIBIDOS Que America NO QUIERE Que Conozcas

In this episode of V8 Legends, I'm going to show you 11 Japanese cars banned for being too fast—legendary JDM models that for years were restricted, banned, or virtually impossible to find in markets like the United States, Australia, and other countries. We're talking about banned Japanese cars, Japanese cars too fast for America, legendary JDM sports cars, and machines that earned such a wild reputation that they ended up on import blacklists, insurance restrictions, or were restricted for young drivers. This list includes names like the Nissan Skyline GT-R R34, Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution V, Mazda RX-7 Bathurst, Nissan 300ZX Twin Turbo, Toyota Celica GT-Four ST205, Subaru Impreza 22B STI, Honda Civic Type R EK9, Nissan Stagea 260RS Autech, Mitsubishi FTO GPX, and Nissan Pulsar GTI-R. Here we explore why these Japanese cars became so controversial, what they had under the hood, why they were so fast for their time, and how their combination of power, all-wheel drive, low weight, and modification potential made them a real threat to regulators, insurance companies, and governments. If you love Japanese cars, banned sports cars, JDM culture, Nissan Skylines, Subaru STIs, Honda Type Rs, Mitsubishi Evolutions, and the craziest stories in the automotive world, this video is for you. This isn't just a countdown of fast cars; it's a look back at some of the most extreme and desirable Japanese machines that the market tried to keep off the streets. Subscribe to V8 Legends for more content on JDM cars, muscle cars, pickups, SUVs, comparisons, automotive history, and the models that defined an era. Which of these banned Japanese cars would you take home to your garage today? Let us know in the comments. Note: We are not historians. If you find any errors in our research, please feel free to mention them in the comments. NOTICE: The clips used in this video are considered fair use under U.S. copyright law, as this content is transformative and does not adversely affect the market for the original material. Fraudulent copyright claims or abuse of YouTube tools is illegal. More Aggressive Version In this episode of Leye