It's fine. Absolutely fine. Perfectly fine.
Part of the problem with evaluating the 370Z Nismo Tech was that it shared my driveway with the new Ford Focus RS, a twitchy, track-craving turbo four-banger also making 350 horsepower but doing it in far more attention-getting ways.
The 370Z doesn't need to go there — doesn't need to be a punk newcomer. This is a middle-aged sports car platform that's less flamboyant than, say, a Corvette or any of the other, obvious, impractical mid-life-crisis-mobiles.
And for this the 370Z is a good deal. Everything came standard on our tester for $45,490. Only a pair of $140 "Nismo" floor mats and $835 in destination charges pushed the sticker above 46,000 bones.
That's kind of an awesome price for a car that's can clock a 0-60 time in 5.3 seconds and still manage a combined 26 mpg. Okay, the exhaust note isn't much to write home about. But not everybody need roars and burps and wails when the want to go fast.
Handling is predictable for a rear-drive set of wheels such as this. You could get yourself in trouble, but you mostly won't.
The Z car's whole reason for being is to be easy on the wallet and fulfilling when you put the pedal down and dig into a corner — but it isn't suppose to scare the bejeezus out of you or make you feel like you couldn't snuggle up for a road trip.
I've heard about Z owners who have never been without a Z, not in decades. They're like Mustang owners. But more niche in their loyalties. The Nismo Tech 370Z offers these stalwarts a but more oomph than what they'd get with the lower trim levels, without undermining that essential Z-ness.
I like the 370Z Nismo Tech. I deeply liked it. Now loving it ... that's another story.