
ⓘ Porsche
Porsche built its legacy around the sounds and feel of an air-cooled flat-six engine and couldn’t resist releasing a 2027 electric Taycan with an E-Shift feature. Its electric supercar can pipe synthetic engine noises through the speakers and jolt with simulated gear changes on demand.
The new 2027 Porsche Taycan performance EV edition now comes with a larger battery and longer range on a charge of up to 700 km WLTP (about 390 miles in EPA estimate).
It is also $6,000 more expensive than the 2026 model, but, hey, it comes with Porsche’s new E-Shift feature that simulates gear shifts and gas-powered motor sounds.
2027 Porsche Taycan E-Shift sounds
Staying true to its sound legacy of naturally aspirated boxer engines, Porsche decided to provide 2027 Taycan buyers with the real deal. During one factory interview not long ago, a Porsche employee said that the company wouldn’t fake combustion engine sounds and feel since it is still putting those in real cars. Some managers apparently drove a Hyundai Ioniq 5 N, though, and loved the faux gas-powered engine sounds, so they decided to go several steps further.
In the newest flagship Taycan, they installed a dedicated blue E-Shift button on the steering wheel and a set of paddles that offer no less than eight simulated gears to go through. There is even a virtual rev counter in the instrument cluster that redlines around 7,300 rpm. Ironically, buyers would be paying more to use an optional feature that makes their car a tad slower, as E-Shift, by design, interrupts torque delivery to mimic the pause between gears “with noticeable shift jerks,” as Porsche puts it.
The dog and pony show even simulates engine braking when lifting off at high “revs,” tugging like a real downshift would. The engine sounds piping through the internal and external speakers apparently vary by trim level, simulating different engine types. All of this is rather ceremonial, and the 2027 Taycan is faster without it, just beating the Nürburgring’s lap record in the executive electric car category. It is plenty fast with the E-Shift simulations, too, so the feature could appeal to longtime Porsche fans who were hesitant to make the EV jump.
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Daniel Zlatev – Senior Tech Writer – 2130 articles published on Notebookcheck since 2021
Wooed by tech since the industrial espionage of Apple computers and the times of pixelized Nintendos, Daniel went and opened a gaming club when personal computers and consoles were still an expensive rarity. Nowadays, fascination is not with specs and speed but rather the lifestyle that computers in our pocket, house, and car have shoehorned us in, from the infinite scroll and the privacy hazards to authenticating every bit and move of our existence.
Daniel Zlatev, 2026-06-18 (Update: 2026-06-18)


