logo
'The Future:' Lamborghini Teases Its Most-Powerful Supercar Ever

'The Future:' Lamborghini Teases Its Most-Powerful Supercar Ever

Motor 130-06-2025
Update:
Lamborghini has provided a teaser image and more details surrounding its new special edition supercar. This story has been updated to reflect that.
Lamborghini
has entered a new era. The recently revealed
Temerario
and
Revuelto
are likely the foundation for a range of future one-off and limited-production variants, and we may already have the name for one such supercar. The Italian automaker has filed a trademark for the name "Fenomeno," suggesting it's cooking up something interesting.
Lamborghini filed the trademark with the
European Union Intellectual Property Office
in April 2025. According to the agency, the filing is in its "opposition proceedings" that conclude on July 15. That means we might have to wait to see the name appear on a new product. Or maybe Lamborghini will surprise us in the coming weeks.
The graphic representation the company submitted with the filing features the wordmark with styling like the brand's other supercars. It has horns on the F and O and a slanted font. The word Fenomeno is Italian and Spanish for phenomenon.
Naming any car the Fenomeno is going to create some big expectations, but Lamborghini has delivered before, and its fresh lineup of hybrids packs a ton of power to play with. The Revuelto features a 6.5-liter hybrid V-12 that makes 1,001 horsepower, while the Temerario's twin-turbo V-8 and three electric motors deliver 920 hp.
Lamborghini has confirmed that it will reveal a new limited-edition supercar at Monterey Car Week. The car will follow in the footsteps of few-offs like the Veneno, Centenario, and others before it. Lamborghini says its new limited-edition model will "map out the future of Lamborghini super sports cars."
Reports from
The Supercar Blog
say that select clients have already seen the vehicle, and it promises to be Lamborghini's most powerful car ever, utilizing the company's ubituqious V-12. Lamborghini will reportedly produce just 29 examples. So we might not have to wait long to learn more.
Read More From Lamborghini:
Lamborghini: Synthetic Fuel Could Save the Combustion Engine
Lamborghini Is Sticking With Gas Engines for The Long Haul
Get the best news, reviews, columns, and more delivered straight to your inbox, daily.
back
Sign up
For more information, read our
Privacy Policy
and
Terms of Use
.
Sources:
European Union Intellectual Property Office
via
Auto Express
,
The Supercar Blog
Share this Story
Facebook
X
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Reddit
WhatsApp
E-Mail
Got a tip for us? Email:
tips@motor1.com
Join the conversation
(
)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rangoon Bistro Opens a Burmese Tavern in Portland
Rangoon Bistro Opens a Burmese Tavern in Portland

Eater

time4 minutes ago

  • Eater

Rangoon Bistro Opens a Burmese Tavern in Portland

is the regional editor for Eater's Northern California/Pacific Northwest sites, writing about restaurant and bar trends, upcoming openings, and pop-ups for the San Francisco Bay Area, Portland, Seattle, and Denver. This is a list of Portland's most notable restaurant and bar openings, with new updates published twice a month. Did we miss something great? Please drop us a line. What it is: This Asian supermarket touches down in Portland, finally, bringing 35,000-square-feet of Asian groceries, produce, vegetables, live seafood, and more. When it opens: Saturday, August 16 Where it is: 10544 SE Washington Street Learn more: Popular Asian grocery sets Portland store's opening date What it is: A popular cafe chain in Vietnam opened its first Oregon location, serving ice milk coffee sets, its signature Thien Coffee drink, and kopi luwak — yes, the coffee made with beans digested by civet cats (although that is factory-made, these days). When it opened: Saturday, August 2 Where it is: 8435 SE Powell Boulevard Learn more: A Titanic Vietnamese Cafe Opens After Much Hype in Portland What it is: Longtime favorite Ringside Steakhouse was forced to close after a kitchen fire in April of this year, but now the restaurant has returned after a renovation. When it opened: Monday, August 4 Where it is: 2165 W Burnside Street Learn more: Portland's Ringside Steakhouse returns after fire, complete renovation What it is: Seattle's Sea Wolf Bakers opened an outpost of its shop — dubbed Woodblock Bakery — inside the Woodblock Chocolate facility. Sea Wolf co-founder Jess Schumann is behind the micro-bakery, his first without co-founder (and brother) Kit Schumann, and their third shop overall. When it opened: Wednesday, August 6 Where it is: 1715 NE 17th Avenue Learn more: Seattle's great Sea Wolf Bakers will open a 'tiny' new bakery at Portland's Woodblock Chocolate What it is: Kim Dam and chef Richard Le of Mémoire Cà Phê and Mikey Nguyen of consignment store Index, have joined forces for this vinyl bar with an all-day menu from Matta, plus a dinner menu and cocktails. When it opened: Thursday, August 7 Where it is: 2226 NE Broadway Learn more: Hennessy and Anti-Smash Burgers Reign Supreme at After Ours What it is: Bollywood Theater chef-owner Troy MacLartty closed the SE Division location of his business, reopening as Maglia Rosa, a seasonal Italian restaurant and market. When it opened: Friday, August 8 Where it is: 3010 SE Division Street Learn more: What We Know About Maglia Rosa in Portland What it is: The Aimsir Distilling room is reborn as Kachka Fabrika, a seafood-driven cocktail bar that showcases vodka distilled in-house. This new spot is an offshoot of the popular restaurant Kachka from Bonnie Frumkin Morales and Israel Morales. When it opened: Friday, July 11 Where it is: 2117 NE Oregon Street Learn more: Scallops and Vodka Flights Are On Board at Kachka's Stunning New Bar What it is: Bone Sine is the sister business to Portland favorite Rangoon Bistro, opening next door and serving classic cocktails with Burmese ingredients and dishes like lahpet htamin. When it opened: Thursday, July 17 Where it is: 3753 N Mississippi Avenue Learn more:One of Portland's Buzziest Restaurants Is Opening a Powerful Burmese Tavern Eater Portland All your essential food and restaurant intel delivered to you Email (required) Sign Up By submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Notice . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

‘Get your back office together': 6 tips from the Herald's Black business event
‘Get your back office together': 6 tips from the Herald's Black business event

Miami Herald

time34 minutes ago

  • Miami Herald

‘Get your back office together': 6 tips from the Herald's Black business event

What does it take for a Black-owned business to succeed in South Florida? Three Miami business leaders spoke Tuesday night at Miami Gardens' Co-Space for 'Building Black Businesses,' a Miami Herald discussion on how local entrepreneurs can launch small businesses or elevate existing ventures. Suzan McDowell, the founder of Circle of One Marketing; Aamir Taylor, the owner of Italian Vice, a frozen treats business; and Matthew Pigatt, the director of small business and membership services at the Miami-Dade Chamber of Commerce, spoke about what small business owners can do to succeed. Here are some of the key takeaways from the discussion: McDowell believes in the importance of being so good at something that people will advocate for you, even in your absence. 'Part of marketing is when somebody in this room is in another room that I'm not in and somebody brings up my name,' she said. 'It's a part of marketing. It's what people are saying about you.' Taylor agreed with that approach, especially thinking back to when he started his Italian ice business five years ago. 'I'm my marketer,' he said. 'I was in front of every single person. I'm serving every single person. So that was my goal, was to put smiles on people's faces and to be my own marketing. So when you see my Instagram, you're gonna see me. You're going to see me, probably in almost every single picture. You're gonna see my staff.' Pigatt emphasized the need for business owners to have their paperwork in order. 'Get your back office together,' Pigatt said. 'That means your financials, taxes, not reporting a loss every single year, making sure you can look at a profit and produce a profit and loss statement, your SunBiz is up to date and that you're not owing taxes.' 'These are the fundamentals, and in having all those things in a folder — all your certifications, your business plan, your [standard operating procedure] — those things help tremendously and help build a business.' Taylor said there were several organizations, including the Miami-Dade Chamber, that helped him out with that when he first started. 'I had a lot of help from Miami Bayside Foundation. They started me off in one of my first loans. The Miami Foundation, another one,' he said. 'A big company that helped me a lot was aīre ventures. They were called Opportunity Connect when I first started, but aīre ventures, they helped me a lot with financials, bookkeeping, learning my business and things of that nature.' McDowell said business owners don't necessarily need a big budget for social media. One way to get out there is to take videos of your work and share them. 'We post flyers, because sometimes you've got to get information out,' she said. 'But videos — somebody needs to be taking a video. You post it, and then that's how you're going to get engagement. It's videos of people doing things, doing regular things.' Taylor has received grants from organizations like the Miami Foundation and acknowledged that they can help small business owners excel. But he recommends that entrepreneurs use the money wisely and don't grow dependent on them. 'Once you apply for your grants and loans, don't ever expect them,' Taylor said. 'Don't ever wait on them. Because you can get a grant today, and you might not get that grant money for eight months after they tell you that you got the grant.' Taylor recommends that entrepreneurs establish good personal credit so that they can eventually use and build business credit. 'Make sure you have your credit in place [by] building your personal credit first, but that's something that you want to almost try to get away from,' he said. 'You need to start thinking about business credit. ... Getting your personal credit up to where it needs to be, you can walk into a bank, no problems.' The Miami-Dade Chamber offers AI training, and Pigatt said that using AI can help small business owners in a big way. 'You can look up business use cases for ChatGPT, marketing use cases for ChatGPT, and people will break down these use cases,' he said. 'When you see how other people are using it, then you can see how you use it for yourself.' McDowell said her staff recently encouraged her to use ChatGPT to help write a business proposal. 'It gave me a wonderful proposal, and now we got the account,' she said. 'So it's really there to make your life easier. But I don't think AI is ever going to be able to duplicate me or you or any of us.' Taylor said he uses AI to help craft email responses when the situation calls for it. 'Responding to emails we're all dealing with, disgruntled customers, just using AI to respond to emails in a nice, smooth manner. You know, there's people that ask me to do events and stuff like that, and I don't like to turn anything down, but I need to be able to make a certain amount of money,' he said. 'To be able to let people down in a nice way and respond to people in a nice way, I think that's what it helps me with, personally.'

Premier League chief calls for patience as Man City legal case drags on
Premier League chief calls for patience as Man City legal case drags on

San Francisco Chronicle​

time34 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Premier League chief calls for patience as Man City legal case drags on

LONDON (AP) — The Premier League's top official called for patience Wednesday while the seismic legal case involving Manchester City drags on into another season. City was charged by the league in February 2023 with more than 100 financial breaches, including providing misleading information about its sources of income. The case was heard by an independent commission between September and December last year but no verdict has been reached. Punishment could be as extreme as expulsion from the top flight. City has always denied the charges. The issue hangs over the start of another Premier League campaign, with the 2025-26 season starting Friday. But Richard Masters, the competition's chief executive, reiterated the league has no control or say over the timings. Asked in an interview with British broadcaster Sky Sports News why the league could not hurry the process along, Masters said: 'I can't answer that specific question. All I can tell you about is the system and how it works. 'I mean, it's an independent judiciary, essentially. So once the allegations, the charge, has been put forward, they go before an independent panel, which is independently selected, and they are then in charge of the process and its timings. They hear the case, they decide the outcome, and we have no influence over that, over it or its timing. That's right from an independence point of view." 'I just have to wait,' he said, "and legal processes rarely take less time than you anticipated, but we have to be patient.' Taking the Premier League abroad The Spanish league has recently approved a request for a match, between Villarreal and Barcelona, to be played in the United States in December and Masters was asked whether the Premier League had any similar desire to take a game abroad. Masters said the need has lessened. 'We did look at the '39th game' way back when, with lots of controversy. I recall that very clearly," Masters said of a controversial proposal made back in 2008 of having an extra round of matches played overseas. 'Our objective at the time, when thinking about it, was to help grow the Premier League around the world. 'And we've been able to do that through different means, through brilliant broadcast partnerships, through digital technology, investing in other areas, like the Summer Series tournament we've just had in the U.S., and now the Premier League is a genuinely global league. There are billions of people who will be tuning in over the course of the next next nine months to watch Premier League action. So we've achieved that objective by different means, that necessity has dissipated.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store