The Psychology of People Who Are OBSESSED With German Cars SPECIFICALLY

Picture a parking lot on a Sunday morning. Most cars sit quietly, ignored. But in one corner, a small group has gathered around three vehicles. A midnight blue BMW M3. A silver Porsche 911. An Audi RS6 in matte gray. The men and women standing around them aren't talking about where they're going. They're talking about engineering tolerances, about the sound a flat-six makes at seven thousand RPM, about the difference between understeer and oversteer and why it matters at the limit. To an outsider, this looks like a conversation about machines. But it isn't. It's a conversation about identity, philosophy, and what it means to believe that precision is a form of art.