During our week with the 720S, we put it through its paces from the winding country roads of rural New Jersey to the boulevards of Manhattan. We also subjected the McLaren to what is possibly the most treacherous test in the world for a supercar, the chaos of Friday afternoon rush hour traffic in New York.
The McLaren survived everything we could throw at it with flying colors. It delivered on all fronts; blistering acceleration off the line, buttery smooth cruising on the highway, and pure exhilaration around the corners. The steering is the most precise I've ever encountered and its slick shifting 7-speed dual-clutch gearbox is, as my colleague Matt DeBord put it, telepathic.
The new 710 horsepower, twin-turbo V12 is an engineering masterpiece and word on the street says McLaren can reliably squeeze more than 800 ponies out of the 4.0-liter engine.
Through it all, the cabin remained civilized and comfortable while the in-car tech worked without a hitch.
Its road-going spaceship looks and melodious exhaust also drew crowds of admirers everywhere we took the car.
So, was our love affair with the McLaren 720S a fleeting holiday romance? No.
A few hundred miles on the roads of New Jersey made me love the 720S even more. Which allows me to reiterate the point I made in May:
"Simply put, the McLaren 720S is the most "complete" supercar ever produced. Period."
And in terms of capability, I'll take it one step further. Having spent extensive time with its rivals from Honda, Audi, Lamborghini, and Ferrari, the McLaren is, in my opinion, the best supercar in the world right now.
In fact, at $300,000, you'd be hard-pressed to find anything better than the 720S for less than $1 million.