The driving experience is similar to the previous generation, which is an easy, easy, easy car to drive. But the driving never calls attention to itself. This is what all the Prius haters complain about: It's a goldarn transportation appliance, goldarnit! It's not even a real goldarn auto-mo-beel!
Enthusiasts may recoil, but for a large number of people this incredibly fuel-efficient and exceptionally reliable transportation appliance is just right. I spend less than $300 annually on gas, and that's with the outgoing model. If I had the new model, I'd save more.
The engine is still, on paper, unimpressive: only 95 horsepower, from a 1.8-liter, 4-cylinder powerplant, yoked to a continuously variable transmission (CVT) with the electric motor bringing the total horsepower up to 121. The aerodynamics have been improved, and the hybrid system tweaked, so overall fuel economy is better, and that's what most Prius buyers really care about most. They don't much care about 0-60 mph times (Toyota says 10 seconds) or the top speed (Who even knows?)
The car feels beefed up, ever so slightly, and some weight has been added, thanks to a revamped rear suspension. It gives you the sense of being better planted in corners. It's also a little bit better at highway cruising, and the hybrid powertrain is quieter, so long trips are more relaxing.
But basically, it's the same old Prius — well, the same old previous generation, anyway — subjected to the Toyota Way and continually improved. And that's rather reassuring. Nobody wanted a radically different new Prius.
And here's the thing: the new Prius is better than the old Prius in one critical way — the gas mileage is even better. That's always been the Prius' best feature.