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1968 Dodge Charger Gets Digital Slammed Widebody Treatment, Looks Wickedly Cool

1968 Dodge Charger CGI restomod by carmstyledesign 16 photos
Photo: carmstyledesign / YouTube
1968 Dodge Charger CGI restomod by carmstyledesign1968 Dodge Charger CGI restomod by carmstyledesign1968 Dodge Charger CGI restomod by carmstyledesign1968 Dodge Charger CGI restomod by carmstyledesign1968 Dodge Charger CGI restomod by carmstyledesign1968 Dodge Charger CGI restomod by carmstyledesign1968 Dodge Charger CGI restomod by carmstyledesign1968 Dodge Charger CGI restomod by carmstyledesign1968 Dodge Charger CGI restomod by carmstyledesign1968 Dodge Charger CGI restomod by carmstyledesign1968 Dodge Charger CGI restomod by carmstyledesign1968 Dodge Charger CGI restomod by carmstyledesign1968 Dodge Charger CGI restomod by carmstyledesign1968 Dodge Charger CGI restomod by carmstyledesign1968 Dodge Charger CGI restomod by carmstyledesign
Dodge will try to change the paradigm of 'American muscle cars' with the eighth iteration of the legendary Charger – now a Daytona all-electric or a Sixpack Hurricane built in Canada instead of a V8-toting 'monster.'
In the United States, the Charger nameplate has been used across no less than eight generations for mid-size cars, personal luxury coupes, subcompact hatchbacks, two-door fastbacks, and hardtops, or, most recently, on full-size sedans. Starting with 2024, Dodge will try to blend heritage with innovation and is set to offer the Charger Daytona with EV powertrains as a two-door fastback coupe and also a four-door sedan.

From 2025, the company will also put into production the direct successor of the Hemi V8 models – the Charger Sixpack equipped with Stellantis' fresh 3.0-liter Hurricane inline-six twin-turbo mill offering either 420 or 550 horsepower with the same body styles as the EV counterpart. However, it's most likely that not everyone likes the direction they're taking – perhaps due to their decision to drop the Hemi V8 from the lineup or the fresh styling. Or maybe both?

Anyway, that doesn't mean there aren't any solutions. The L-bodied Dodge Charger sedan and Challenger coupe are still on the market even though the automaker stopped producing them in December 2023 – you just have to find the right locale with inventory. Alternatively, you could envision the perfect 'restomod' project that blends the old-school style with all the modern amenities of a veritable Hellcat.

Sure, maybe it's hard to imagine it. No worries, as the dreamy realm of digital car content creators have a solution – the virtual artist tucked behind the Carmstyledesign moniker on social media dropped the modern CGI shenanigans a while back for some old-school ideas, and now he's also focused on a 1968 Dodge Charger. This second-generation ride is easy to recognize as a classic muscle car, but it's also a modern hoot, through and through.

The details are always what make a project car delicious – this Charger has a semi-widebody kit with the big front wheels tucked under the fenders and the rear ones displaying the massively concave aftermarket-style wheels in all their glory. The body is dressed in satin blue with classic black stripes at the rear, and the round headlights plus double taillights are still here – albeit with a modern, pulsing LED treatment.

Also, note the black top and piano black aerodynamic elements sitting as close as possible to the CGI surface thanks to the slammed attitude. It's a rascal, all right, as the pixel master made sure to let us know there's a mighty V8 under the hood – every time we circle around the digital rear there's an omnipresent burble and he also gives us a quick rev for some delightful V8 roars. Cool, right?

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About the author: Aurel Niculescu
Aurel Niculescu profile photo

Aurel has aimed high all his life (literally, at 16 he was flying gliders all by himself) so in 2006 he switched careers and got hired as a writer at his favorite magazine. Since then, his work has been published both by print and online outlets, most recently right here, on autoevolution.
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