With the SUV craze yet to show signs of slowing down, let alone stopping, even the world's major supercar manufacturers are swooping in for a piece of the oversize vehicle cake. The latest to do so is Ferrari as no more than a week ago, we finally got a peek at the Prancing Horse's all-new model, the Purosangue.

Rising from the road, it towers above any model Ferrari has made in the past. Ensuring it keeps the Italian manufacturer's sporty, exclusive DNA, the Purosangue features a mind-boggling 6.5-liter 725 horsepower V12. Though with the large capacity engine reserved for the brand's most loyal customers, a standard power plant that will most certainly power the majority of Ferrari SUV cars will be a more modest six-pot. While Ferrari hasn't directly mentioned what engine this will be, it's fair to assume a detuned version of the 3-liter V6 that powers the 296 GTB.

Be it the performance-oriented DBX707-rivalling variant or its little sibling, the Purosangue is sure to make an impact in the SUV market, being one of the most highly anticipated cars in the last few years. One thing's for sure, its interior will certainly be a huge selling point. Here are our favorite features from the Purosangue's cabin.

Not Just Ferrari's First Four-Door, The Purosangue Has Suicide Doors

Ferrari-Purosangue-2023 interior
via: Ferrari

With uber-luxurious, four-seat models such as the 250 GTE 2+2, the Mondial and, of course, the GTC4 Lusso, it may come as a surprise that no four-door car has ever worn the Prancing Horse badge. In the past, cars of a longer nature have always relegated themselves to baring the Maserati trident instead.

But with this latest member of the Ferrari fleet, all that has changed. A luxury SUV with just three doors always felt like a strange idea, and we're glad to see Ferrari feels the same way. The Purosangue is a four-door car, adding a second set of doors for the rear seats.

RELATED: Lincoln Continental Returns For 2020 With Iconic Suicide DoorsThat's not all, though. The true surprise when it comes to the Ferrari SUV's door situation has to be the orientation of the second set. Just like a Rolls-Royce, the Purosangue features suicide doors, giving the enlarged model even more status.

Traditionally, inverted rear doors provide better ease of access to the rear seats. In fact, the rear passengers won't have to worry about walking around a door before falling into their seat. With the Purosangue, once the door is open, nothing is stopping you from sliding into the unusually sporty, for a utility vehicle, bucket seats.

Ferrari Does The SUV Its Own Way

2023 Ferrari Purosangue second-row seats view
Via: Ferrari

Despite Sport being the 'S' in SUV, these tall, wide, heavy vehicles don't tend to be all that sporty. And when they are, the only real visual clues are some aggressive styling, a few carbon fiber accents and an exhaust seemingly full of popping candy.

With the Ferrari Purosangue, however, you really can tell that this car has performance in its veins. Deep bucket seats similar to those in the brand's low-slung sports cars fill not only the front row, but also the second row. The children of your company's CEO probably won't enjoy sitting in this car then, and we expect it to be rather difficult fitting booster seats. But for those that like a firm seating position while being flung from one side of a mountain road to the other, these seats are sure to do fine.

A quick look at the Ferrari configurator reveals the interior is available in a plethora of colors blending leather and Alcantara, though for a classy look, we'd immediately go for the Blu Medio leather. With somewhat of a double bubble shape, one might argue that the dashboard isn't the prettiest example available on the market, especially when carbon fiber trim lining the width of the cabin decorates it. The center console features the same gear selector as other modern Ferrari cars, connecting to the automatic transmission. You know the one, it does its best to look like the manual gated shifters of old.

Tech We'd Expect And More In The Ferrari Purosangue

Ferrari Purosangue Interior In Biege Leather
Via: Ferrari

Over the past decade or so, Ferrari has fitted larger and larger screens in front of its passengers. Presenting information such as G-force, turbo pressure and revs, this is probably not what normal passengers would choose to look at, but if you're a gearhead like us, that surely sounds like a great gimmick.

On the Purosangue, the screen is once again present, though it seems to have dramatically grown from previous models. It seems the size of the screen is proportional to that of the car. Though unlike the sportier vehicles from the brand, the SUV's screen displays everything one would expect from a central infotainment screen; air conditioning information, seat adjustment and settings to name a few.

The driver obviously also has their own display within the instrument cluster, which should offer everything from performance data to navigation.

RELATED: 10 Must-Have Car Tech Features For 2022With a large screen in front of the passenger, the center console looks very much empty. It merely carries the air conditioning and heating controls with rotary dials and a few touch-sensitive buttons. With that in mind, the central knob certainly looks good, taking center stage among a very uncluttered dash.

Somehow in this cabin with very minimal controls, the Ferrari engineers have managed to integrate massaging front seats. It seems then that the Purosangue is trying to challenge the likes of the luxury cars from Maybach and Rolls-Royce, all while targeting the speed and performance of the Lamborghini Urus and Porsche Macan GTS. In doing so, it feels like the car is having something of an identity crisis. Though with plenty of the world's richest asking for a four-door Ferrari SUV for countless years now, there's certainly interest in the car regardless.