Article: Four door Camaro fight just exploded as manual V8 rumors divide enthusiasts ahead of 2028 return

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https://www.msn.com/en-us/autos/new...mors-divide-enthusiasts-ahead-of-2028-return/

GM’s four door Camaro fight just exploded as manual V8 rumors divide enthusiasts ahead of 2028 return

May 9, 2026

The Chevy Camaro is officially headed back to production, but the celebration inside the enthusiast world is already turning into a civil war. General Motors has reportedly approved the next-generation Camaro for a late 2027 production launch, bringing the badge back for the 2028 model year with rear-wheel drive, internal combustion power, and something many drivers feared was disappearing forever: a six-speed manual transmission.

That should have been the headline everyone rallied around.

Instead, the biggest conversation surrounding the Camaro revival is the rumor that GM may give the next-generation car four doors. For some enthusiasts, that instantly crosses a line. For others, it may be the only realistic way the Camaro survives in today’s market.

And that’s where things get complicated.

After ending sixth-generation Camaro production following the 2024 model year, GM largely went silent about the future of the nameplate. That silence fueled speculation that the Camaro was either dead entirely or headed toward some kind of electric crossover transformation that would have completely alienated traditional muscle car buyers.

Now, according to sources familiar with the program, GM has approved a new Camaro using an updated Alpha 2 architecture known internally as Alpha 2-2. Production is reportedly scheduled for Lansing Grand River in Michigan, the same plant that built the outgoing Camaro and currently produces Cadillac’s CT4 and CT5.

Here’s the part that matters. GM is not abandoning the formula completely.

The new Camaro is expected to remain front-engine, rear-wheel drive, and powered by internal combustion engines. In a performance market increasingly moving toward electrification and automatic-only drivetrains, that decision alone will matter to enthusiasts who still want a traditional American performance car experience.

The manual transmission news may be even more important.

Sources indicate the next-generation Camaro will offer both a six-speed manual and an automatic transmission. That instantly separates it from GM’s own Corvette C8, which has remained automatic-only despite years of demand from drivers begging for a stick shift option.

For a lot of enthusiasts, the manual gearbox is non-negotiable. The reaction online made that clear almost immediately after reports surfaced. Some enthusiasts flatly stated they would not even consider the car without a six-speed.

That detail matters because GM appears to understand something many automakers are starting to forget. Performance is not just about horsepower figures or acceleration times. Driver involvement still matters. The connection between car and driver still matters.

But then came the four-door rumor.

Sources indicate the next Camaro may adopt a four-door fastback layout roughly comparable in size to the old Chevy SS or Malibu. Insiders reportedly say the design will avoid a traditional three-box sedan appearance, leaning instead toward a more aggressive fastback silhouette.

Even so, the reaction from longtime Camaro fans was immediate and harsh.

For many enthusiasts, Camaro has always meant two doors. The idea of stretching the badge across a larger four-door vehicle feels less like evolution and more like brand dilution. Some enthusiasts argued online that the Camaro identity effectively ended years ago with earlier generations, while others dismissed the rumored car as little more than a rebadged performance sedan wearing a famous name for marketing purposes.

And honestly, you can see why this argument exploded so quickly.

The Camaro name carries weight because it represents decades of American performance history tied directly to coupes, V8s, rear-wheel drive, and affordable muscle car culture. Once a brand starts changing body styles dramatically, enthusiasts immediately start questioning whether the automaker still understands why people cared about the car in the first place.

This is where the story turns.

Not everyone hates the idea.

Some enthusiasts pushed back against the criticism by pointing out the platform’s potential. The Cadillac CT4-V Blackwing already rides on related architecture and weighs around 3,850 pounds with four doors and luxury equipment. Others argued that fears of a bloated 4,500-pound Camaro may be exaggerated, especially if GM keeps the car closer in spirit to the CT4-V rather than turning it into a larger luxury-heavy sedan.''

That distinction matters because the market has changed dramatically since earlier Camaro generations dominated American streets.

Dodge already shifted the Charger into a four-door formula years ago. Ford has reportedly explored broader Mustang expansion as well. Meanwhile, traditional two-door performance cars continue shrinking as a percentage of the market because buyers increasingly demand practicality alongside performance.

GM clearly sees an opportunity sitting between hardcore sports cars and expensive luxury sedans.

A four-door rear-wheel-drive Camaro with a manual transmission and V8 power could potentially occupy a space that barely exists anymore. According to enthusiasts discussing the rumored configuration, the only comparable manual V8 sedan currently available sits deep inside Cadillac territory with pricing starting around six figures.

That creates a massive opening if GM can keep pricing aggressive.

A sub-$50,000 manual rear-wheel-drive American performance sedan would immediately stand out in today’s market. The Dodge Charger EV moved away from traditional V8 power and manual transmissions entirely. The Mustang remains a two-door coupe and convertible. Affordable American manual V8 sedans have practically disappeared.

That’s where things change.

Suddenly the four-door Camaro idea starts looking less like betrayal and more like GM trying to keep performance alive in a market increasingly hostile to affordable enthusiast cars. The company may be trying to balance survival with tradition, even if that balance risks angering longtime loyalists.

There is also another twist quietly hanging over this entire story.

According to GM Authority, the final name may not even be locked in yet. Sources reportedly indicate GM itself remains hesitant about placing the Camaro badge on a four-door vehicle. That hesitation leaves open the possibility of using another historic nameplate instead.

Some enthusiasts already want GM to revive the Chevelle name rather than stretch Camaro into unfamiliar territory. Others believe keeping the Camaro badge alive in any form matters more than preserving strict body style traditions.

And honestly, both sides have a point.

Automakers constantly face pressure to modernize performance cars without destroying what made them iconic in the first place. Some companies fail by abandoning enthusiast values entirely. Others fail because they refuse to adapt until the business case collapses.

Right now, GM appears to be attempting something risky right in the middle.

The company is reportedly bringing back rear-wheel drive, V8 power, and a manual transmission at a time when much of the industry is moving the opposite direction. Enthusiasts should recognize how rare that has become. But GM is also potentially reshaping one of its most recognizable performance brands in the process.

The production line in Lansing reportedly has the green light. The six-speed manual appears to be staying alive. The V8 may survive another generation.

Now comes the harder part. Convincing enthusiasts that a four-door car deserves to wear one of the most important names in American muscle history.
 

arpad_m

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This article makes it sound like GM is doing some kind of favor or charitable service to V8 engines by keeping them on the menu. Nothing can be far from the truth, and I for one wouldn't want a consolation prize engine kept alive solely for nostalgia anyway.

Also, a 4-door sedan can be an excellent vehicle, but it isn't a Camaro.

It would be a strange decision no matter what, because GM already has the Cadillac CT5-V Blackwing that is already literally the perfect 4-door performance car, bar none, so I don't see why they'd want to set up its competition in-house now at half the price.
 

Mr_Draco

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This isn't any new news, they are just repeating everything we already know.

Also, they completely contradict themselves. At first they say " The Chevy Camaro is officially headed back to production... " but then a couple paragraphs down they say " according to sources familiar with the program, GM has approved a new Camaro ..." So it's not official, they are just quoting the same source GM Authority quoted a month ago.
 

TheHorse13

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I've always hated the idea of a 4 door Dodge Charger, but people bought them hand over fist. I hate the idea of a 4 door Camaro, but maybe people will line up for them.

To that end, if a traditional 2 door manual gear box Camaro comes out of GM and it actually looks like a Camaro, I'd call that a win. Let's see what we get.
 

Mr_Draco

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:facepalm:

Everyone knows this, even the guys that want a stick shift. You missed the entire point of those asking for a stick shift option. People who buy stick shifts now a days don't care about racing, don't care about performance, don't care about any of those things you are trying to force on them. All they care about is what makes the car fun to drive. You're over here calling people pathetic for choosing to have fun but who is truly the pathetic one? The people who wants to have fun and enjoy life or the person who wants to take that away and force them to choose something else because they don't want it. I'll give you a hint, it's not them.
 

I-SHIFT

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6 speed manual or nothing. All my ZL1 1LEs have been MT. On a road course the MT commands an extra level of ability and skill. We know the AT is faster, and we all compare apples to apples. A ZL1 will never attain the track record so why bother trying. We compare other MTS to other MTs regardless of make and model. Plus us MT guys quietly know we are more complete wheel men and we are completely engaged with the mechanics of the vehicle. So oooo much fun.

You've totally missed the emotional side of pounding gears and learning the subtle nuances.
 

Ace

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I think it's pretty clear that the new car in development is more of a "Camaro successor" instead of a direct Camaro 7. The first articles even stated that it's unclear if the car will even get the Camaro name or might be something else. I think a retro inspired Impala is actually quite perfect for a smallblock 4 door car

There is no way to turn that the Camaro 6 just didn't sell well compared to 5 for many reasons. Just building the same forumula again with tweaks to practicability will not work since the even for the Mustang the market is dying even with both competitiors out of the picture.
 

PDXSSCE

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I think it's pretty clear that the new car in development is more of a "Camaro successor" instead of a direct Camaro 7.
💯
I think a retro inspired Impala is actually quite perfect for a smallblock 4 door car.
I'm certain that Chevrolet is attempting to attract a younger market and while I'd love to see the return of an Impala SS, it identifies with an older family oriented market.
 

Aqua Blue RS/SS

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That’s got to be the dumbest post I’ve ever read on any of the Camaro forums. Must be coming from someone who can’t drive a manual transmission. Just because it may not be as fast as modern automatics doesn’t mean that taking a manual transmission from the equation isn’t robbing the driver of the total driving experience, and that’s coming from someone who currently has an automatic 5th gen SS.
 
 
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