Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Subaru gets wilder with 2022 Outback Wilderness

- By Henry Payne Henry Payne is auto critic for The Detroit News. Find him at hpayne@detroitnew­s.com or Twitter @HenryEPayn­e.

All hail the halo.

My first car back in 1984 was the halo Volkswagen Golf GTI (nee Rabbit), the ultimate expression of the Golf hatchback. I have also owned the BMW M3 and Honda Si, halo vehicles for the 3-series and Civic, respective­ly. Halo badges like the GT3, STI, ZR1 and Scat Pack have also defined performanc­e lineups for years.

But in the Age of Ute, the halo is changing. Where halo once denoted raw track performanc­e, now it defines off-road performanc­e as well, as buyers crave high-riding, adventure-mobiles.

Sure, track prowess has translated to SUVs, with Frankenste­in monsters like the Dodge Durango Hellcat and Jeep Grand Cherokee Trackhawk — but generally the off-road halo segment is suddenly the bee’s knees. Think Jeep Rubicon, Jeep Trailhawk, Ford Bronco Sport Badlands, Toyota RAV4 TRD Off-Road.

Welcome the 2022 Subaru Outback Wilderness to the campfire.

Like its competitor­s, the Wilderness is based on solid off-road bones. The 2020 Outback is a treat, with its signature

all-wheel-drive capability now matched by bold styling, modern interior and even a competent driver-assist feature. Get it in black-trimmed Onyx guise and you’ll be the envy of Subie nation.

Wilderness then cranks the volume knob to 11. It wears one loud suit. If the winged Subaru WRX STI got its wardrobe tips from a Formula One car, then the Wilderness looks like a blown-up La Sportiva Bushido trail running shoe.

Black cladding is everywhere, from the new front fascia to the fenders to the rear corners — even the hood gets a big black decal.

It’s a halo thing, and I like it. STIs are defined by the wing, GTIs by their turbine wheels. The off-roaders gotta have their own style lingo, dude.

I’m less enamored of the drivetrain. Subaru says its customers are looking for an off-road destinatio­n vehicle — not an off-road immersion vehicle like a Jeep. Where the STI halo gets a turbo-4 blown out of its mind, the Outback is content to supply Wilderness with the same 260-horse turbo-4 as the Onyx.

I grunted around the sandy caverns of Holl Oaks ORV Park in the Wilderness and pined for more sand-churning torque. I’m not asking for a 6.4-liter beast like the Jeep Rubicon 392, but for 40 grand, Wilderness deserves more.

Most of the time, its purpose is as an on-road commuter where the Outback’s roomy, quiet interior is more tolerable than a raw off-roader. You can talk to your fellow passengers in the back seat — including 6-footers (like yours truly) who will enjoy its midsize leg room compared with smaller compacts of the off-road halo species.

 ?? SUBARU ?? Approach angles on the Wilderness have increased from 18.6 to 20.0 degrees.
SUBARU Approach angles on the Wilderness have increased from 18.6 to 20.0 degrees.

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