3 Reviews
Edmunds' review of the 2024 Fisker Ocean Extreme is decidedly negative, scoring just 38/100, with the vehicle's bankruptcy creating a cascade of critical failures. The few bright spots include striking design features like the California mode glass panel and solar roof, plus impressive EPA-estimated range of 358 miles that ranks in the top 10, and a comfortable ride quality that exceeds the Tesla Model Y and Ford Mustang Mach-E. However, promised driving tech features like adaptive cruise control and one-pedal driving will never arrive, the cabin tech is non-functional (key fob failures, a mobile app that never launched), and the vehicle has experienced catastrophic value loss of 80% during the review period—all while receiving no future software updates due to Fisker's bankruptcy. This vehicle is only for buyers who can tolerate missing promised features and severe depreciation in exchange for driving comfort and range.
▶ Watch Review ↗The Fisker Ocean 2023 receives a mixed rating of 45/100, reflecting a vehicle with compelling strengths undermined by significant execution issues. The Ocean excels in economy (90/100) with an impressive 360-mile range on the Extreme trim and solid performance (0-60 in 4 seconds), while its design stands out at 76/100 with muscular aesthetics and sleek LED headlights that reviewers found genuinely attractive. However, reliability and value are major concerns, with the vehicle scoring just 12/100 for reliability due to software bugs, rapid 12-volt battery drain, and systems requiring dealer recalibration, while value plummets to 10/100 as feature creep has driven pricing to $70,500 despite available discounts—and the reviewer ultimately notes the Ocean needed "more time in development" to realize its potential. The Ocean is best suited for early adopters willing to accept an ambitious but flawed electric vehicle in exchange for strong range and performance.
▶ Watch Review ↗The 2024 Fisker Ocean receives a mixed 57/100 score from Edmunds, reflecting a vehicle with compelling ideas but significant execution problems. The Ocean excels in economy and design—delivering an impressive 358 miles of EPA-matching range and a sustainable build with 95% recyclable materials and a solar roof—while the cabin tech benefits from a well-integrated 17.1-inch touchscreen paired with helpful physical controls. However, critical flaws undermine the ownership experience: the driving_tech score of just 12/100 reveals missing promised features like adaptive cruise control and voice commands, while reliability issues including camera faults that disabled safety systems emerged within the first week of ownership. Edmunds characterizes the Ocean as "incomplete even by startup standards," though planned 2024 updates may add one-pedal driving and adaptive cruise control—making it a gamble best suited for early adopters with patience for over-the-air fixes rather than buyers seeking a fully-realized EV today.
▶ Watch Review ↗