
- Mansory’s latest monstrosity is the Grand Entrée
- Just eight examples will be built
- It features a host of performance and exterior modifications
More Madness From Mansory
German tuner Mansory never lets taste get in the way of an outrageous design, and its latest modified Mercedes-Benz stays true to that form. The Grand Entrée is a 2025 Mercedes-AMG G 63 equipped with the expectedly-unsubtle Mansory visual changes, plus some performance upgrades, plus the suicide doors that Mansory recently debuted on its P820 Linea D’Arabo build.
Also known as coach doors, these rear-hinged doors are something you’d normally expected to find on a Rolls-Royce, not a rugged off-roader like the G-Class. In the old days, rear-hinged doors acquired the “suicide” nickname because they could easily open while a car is moving, but today they provide easier access to the rear seats and a distinctive look, one that will be unique to the eight Grand Entrées Mansory plans to build.
It’s Got 808 HP
Mansory
While suicide doors are the standout feature of the Grand Entrée, it also has a carbon-fiber body kit with large fender flares (sprouting their own small vents), a rear bumper with diffuser-like strakes, a front bumper with LED daytime running lights, a new grille, a hood that looks like it was fashioned from pieces of an F-1117 Nighthawk stealth fighter, and a roof spoiler and light bar.
Inside, Mansory offers vivid upholstery options like blue and white or purple and orange—neither of which looks easy to keep clean. The layout of the interior is still stock Mercedes but, inside and out, the three-pointed star has been replaced with Mansory’s logo.
Power still comes from a twin-turbocharged 4.0-liter V8, but output increase from 577 horsepower and 627 pound-feet of torque in stock form to 808 hp and 848 lb-ft. Mansory claims the Grand Entrée is about a half second quicker than a stock G 63 from zero to 60 mph. Mercedes already claims a 4.2-second zero to 60 mph time, plus a top speed of up to 149 mph with the optional AMG Performance Package.
G-Class Remains A Star
Mansory
The Mansory modifications will likely appeal to wealthy customers who want to stand out, but the G-Class didn’t exactly need a tuner glow-up. Its combination of luxury and old school looks is unique in the automotive world, and has proven popular enough for Mercedes to sell 600,000 G-Class models since 1979. Mercedes has refined the G-Class a bit over the years, most recently adding an all-electric version, and has hinted at an expanded family with bigger and smaller models. That will give tuners like Mansory more to work with.
Â