Ford knocked the leather off the ball visually. I still haven't sat in a New Bronco, but everything I've seen looks great on the inside, although I'd like more physical switchwork & controls usable with gloves on.
Modern comfort is necessary these days... but a rugged throwback interior with things like physical vent levers near the footwell, manual seats, windows & locks, and panels you're not afraid to accidentally kick or risk breaking could start a trend to make interiors basic again, rather than the stark, empty, sterile wastelands the modern cockpit has become. It could really revolutionize how people see BEV's as a return to a personal vehicle as opposed to a numb rolling appliance with zero character.
As an owner with 20K miles on mine, a few points to make.
There will be people who cheer it on and rave about it being perfect and there will be haters who deny it any positive points.
Most reasonable people fall in there between and look at it objectively.
I've owned and wheeled Wranglers, currently have a Badlands 4door Sasquatch with the 2.7 auto.
I've tested it harder than most, babied it more than several who push the limits far beyond my comfort zone on a $55K vehicle that is a daily also.
It has flawlessly performed on everything I've thrown at it.
It drives nice and smooth on the highway at 55 or 75.
It has tactile HVAC controls and the dial to convert to 4WD or the modes is also tactile. I like that a lot.
The interior of mine is the marine grade vinyl with washout rubber floor, and I've taken the garden hoe to it multiple times with no issue.
The top came off in May and stayed off until late Sept.
I am not a fan of the lag in the pedal (can be remedied with a pedal commander) despite the twin turbos.
Mileage is better than expected at an average of 19.6
The top is easy to maneuver and is loud, as expected.
I do not like how easily the interior plastics scratch.
I don't like that despite the tactile controls, the infotainment has so much power and influence on the systems. If it goes out, you have issues.
I am not a fan of the cheaper feel of the windows and the "drop" before you open the door is not always quick enough. So you have to train yourself to pull the handle, wait a sec before you pull open the door.
I am a fan of the soft top, it does a lot well. Easy, quick utilization.
But it is louder than it should be, and the hard top is just as loud. Price to pay for removable parts, I guess.
All in all it is quite capable. Very much considering the IFS. It is not and never will be as capable in big-time rock crawling or boulder-jumping as a solid axle Wrangler. But is is capable enough on most trails that most people would do. I am quite happy with it compared to the Wranglers I have owned in several areas. And I liked my Jeeps.
YMMV.
Really excited about what Scout is going to bring to the party.
I hope they are taking detailed notes on what Jeep, Ford, and Toyota do well at, and what is less-than-great about each one.
Find some compromise there without a lot of compromise, if that makes sense.