Sorry, but this is crap. I'm under 30, and like most people my age and younger, what keeps us out of performance cars isn't that we're not interested in driving, or performance. It's that we're broke. Crushing college loans, staggering youth unemployment that is much, much higher than the national average, That means that most of us can't afford model-year new cars, much less a performance spec car. The result is most of us youngins' who are into performance buy cheap, ratted-out 90s Japanese idols like the S-chassis, Zed, and the like. Why? They're dirt cheap, and really, often far more thrilling than most anything under $40k new. The truth is... us under 30s? We don't care about the Mustang, the Challenger, Camaro, etc. Yeah. There are some Millennials (I hate that term...so much) who like muscle. Hell, I kind of like vintage muscle. But that is a much smaller segment compared to those of us who grew up idolizing cars that were winning the horsepower (and handling, don't forget handling) wars of the late 80s through the 90s and early 2000s. Those cars? They were from Japan. Now, a bunch of them are available for cheap. Maybe not mint--you won't find a fourth generation Toyota Supra RZ in the bargain bin, and you won't ever again unless it's a salvage--but you'll find an FC3S RX7, middle generation MR2 turbo, plenty of 240SXes and scads upon scads of non-turbo 300ZX begging for a strip-job or engine swap. If you're adventurous, you may even buy a EG or EK generation Civic hatchback and begin the laborious process of buying CTR parts and crying in your garage about how difficult they are to retrofit.
With the era of cheap gas over, and a sudden (but not particularly effective) panic over being kind to the environment (not to mention heavy safety features), most cars available to us new are slow, boring, and designed mainly for cheap commuting. You want a balls-out fun ride that'll hang its tail out? That'll be a minimum of 26 grand. For some, living at home, with few bills and parents that can cosign for that 0% loan, that's easy. You see those kids in STis and Genesis R-Specs, and even Mustang GT Track Pack cars sometimes. You see them in 370Z Sport or NISMO editions. But most of us? We're working on that beat-up E46 or S13. Hell, I considered restoring an '88 Scirocco 16V (I could have bought it for $900 when it was actually about $2500 of non-running spare parts)... Let that sink in for a moment.
We're interested in high-performance, just like you. The difference is, the people before us crashed the economy, and we're paying the price. When we're 45 and have the better-paying jobs (probably only after the boomers have sloughed it off into retirement homes and gated communities in Boca), we'll be the ones driving the Cayman Ses, 911s, AMG mercs, top trim Shelbys, 'vettes, or even something as simple as a Golf R--which when spec'd with anything, becomes a $40,000 proposition. We're putting off, for the most part, having the new performance vehicle. Why? Most of us are more concerned with putting food in our bellies, paying off that (apparently useless) education our balding guidance counselors told us would get us the jobs, and making rent.
I hope the FiST gets a few good years of production. I love mine, and it's the reason I'm able to afford a new, under-warranty performance vehicle today instead of driving a Scirocco 16V I have 4 different (probably busted) hatches for, or a matte black vinyl-wrap mistake of a 240SX I bought off of some guy with an 'illest' tee-shirt.