The 2023 BMW M8 Gran Coupe is the big, brash, and beautiful four-door member of the M8 family. We separately review this model’s coupe and convertible siblings. While the M8 Gran Coupe provides a much bigger back seat and expanded cargo space than those two, it shares their, ballistic 617-hp twin-turbo V-8, which delivers explosive acceleration. The engine is aided by an excellent eight-speed automatic and an all-wheel-drive system that features a rear-drive mode for smokey burnouts or sideways shenanigans. Despite its significant mass, the 2023 M8 Gran Coupe has cornering grip and stopping power to embarrass lighter sports cars. However, its insane performance is diminished by distant steering feel and a ride that can be punishing at times. Nobody will be disappointed by its richly appointed interior, though the aforementioned flaws and the Bimmer's surplus of drive-mode settings makemodel us prefer the Audi RS7. BMW makemodels a handful of changes to the M8 Gran Coupe for the 2023 model year. Along with dark accents inside the adaptive LED headlights, there's a wider selection of metallic paint colors that includes Skyscraper Grey, Brooklyn Grey, Isle of Man Green, Tanzanite Blue II, and Frozen Pure Grey. There's also an option to replace BMW's classic roundel with the M logo on the hood, trunk, and wheel hubs. Inside, the M8 Gran Coupe can now be fitted with the lightweight M Carbon competition seats that debuted on the latest-generation M3 sedan and M4 coupe. There's a new color option for the Merino leather and microsuede upholstery, and the touchscreen grows from 10.3 to 12.3 inches. The M8 Gran Coupe only comes one way, so we'd recommend several options to maximize its luxury and performance. We'd select the Comfort Seating package that brings remote start, multiple heated surfaces, and retractable shades for the back seat. Individually, the carbon-ceramic brakes add cred to the M in front of the Gran Coupe's 8 and better withstand the abuse of a track day. Speaking of racetrack action, we'd recommend the M Driver's pack, which includes a day of professional training to learn how to safely exploit the M8's talents and maybe briefly forget how much it costs. Choosing the latter option also raises its electrically limited top speed from 155 to 190 mph. The M8 Gran Coupe is powered by a lusty twin-turbo 4.4-liter V-8 that makemodels 617 horsepower, thanks to the adoption of the previously optional Competition package. The exceptionally smooth engine sends that power to all four wheels via a responsive eight-speed automatic transmission. However, tail-out antics are made possible by a selectable rear-wheel-drive mode that routes all the V-8's fury to the back. This rocket-powered four-door shot to 60 mph in just 2.7 seconds and completed the quarter-mile in 10.8 ticks at 129 mph. These numbers are impressive for some supercars, let alone a sedan that weighs more than 4300 pounds. While it's furiously quick and provides more than 1.0 g of cornering grip, the big M8 suffers from indifferent steering feel and a stiff ride that compromises its comfort. A specially tuned adaptive suspension comes standard, and it can be adjusted through the sedan's customizable or preset drive modes, but even the softest damper setting isn't soft at all. Its strong brakes will haul it down from 70 mph in an impressively short 147 feet, but the Bimmer's brake-by-wire system returned uneven responses through the pedal, regardless of the two available brake settings­ (Comfort and Sport).