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Pairing the BMW M4 CS F82 against the Nissan GT-R R35 is less a comparison of cars than a clash of philosophies. Here we have the distilled essence of M-division rear-drive tactility facing down the brute-force, techno-overload of Nissan’s AWD “Godzilla.” Both deliver numbers that would’ve humbled supercars not long ago, but it’s how they create those numbers—and how a driver experiences the journey—that reveals their true character.

The M4 CS F82 is, at its core, an evolved driver’s coupe. The S55 straight-six is turbocharged, yes, but its delivery is linear, almost naturally aspirated in feel, with a sharpness that rewards a measured right foot. There’s an underlying sense of balance: enough torque (600 Nm) to threaten the rear tires, yet a chassis that telegraphs every phase of grip. On a circuit like Le Mans - Bugatti, the M4 CS edged the GT-R by just over a second (1:50.12 vs 1:51.35), both driven by the same pilot. The BMW’s lighter mass and rear-drive layout allow it to rotate into tight corners with a kind of measured agility. It’s a car that flatters the patient and precise, letting skilled hands exploit trail braking and nuanced throttle modulation, especially when the surface is less than perfect.

The GT-R R35, by comparison, is unapologetic in its approach: heavy, overpowered, and technologically relentless. The VR38DETT V6 delivers its wallop early and often, and with AWD, the GT-R launches out of slow corners like a slingshot. At high-speed venues like Autodromo di Monza, the difference is night and day—a heavily modified GT-R (1000 PS, slicks) posted a searing 1:52.595, lapping the M4 CS (on Cup 2s, light mods) by more than 17 seconds (2:10). Even when both cars are closer to stock, the GT-R’s weight is masked by brute thrust and torque-vectoring wizardry. What you trade for that speed is intimacy: the GT-R flatters aggression and forgives mistakes, but its size and muted steering mean you’re less in conversation with the chassis, and more dictating terms through a thick filter of electronics.

On flowing, technical circuits, the story gets more nuanced. At Dijon Prenois, a race-prepped M4 CS (640 PS, slicks) squeaked out a narrow win (1:26.79) over a milder GT-R on street tires (1:27.93). Here, the BMW’s willingness to rotate and its transparency at the limit let an experienced driver find those last tenths. The GT-R, even when outgunned in outright grip, remains consistent and confidence-inspiring, but can’t quite match the M4’s ability to pivot and recover time in mid-corner transitions.

Yet, the real split is in the driver experience. The M4 CS is a car that grows with your skill. Its rear-drive layout encourages you to play with rotation, manage slip, and reward smoothness. The GT-R, meanwhile, is a hammer: devastatingly fast out of the box, almost indifferent to surface or weather, and forgiving enough to make mere mortals feel like heroes. The trade-off? The BMW is more demanding—less forgiving if you overstep, but infinitely talkative and satisfying when you get it right. The Nissan is the ultimate equalizer: devastating on power circuits, less vivid on the edge, but a lap-time machine when outright pace is the goal.

In the end, your track-day ambitions dictate the choice. If you want to chase lap times with surgical focus and crave a platform that lets you dance on the edge, the M4 CS is the thinking driver’s tool. If you want to dominate straights, lean on technology, and erase mistakes with brute force, the GT-R R35 is in a class of its own. Both deliver speed—but the journey is entirely different, and that’s the real story told by the stopwatch.

Last updated: Mar 6, 2026

Specifications

Specifications BMW M4 CS F82 M4 CS F82 Nissan GT-R R35 GT-R R35
Model Years 2014-2020 2007-2020
horsepower 460 545
torque (N_M) 601 628
forced Induction Yes Yes
weight (KG) 1,580 1,737
Power to Weight 0.29 0.31
Rank #87 #85
Tire 180 PILOT SPORT CUP 2
265/35/19 / 285/30/20
200 SP SPORT 600 DSST
255/40/20
engine Description 3.0 L S55 twin-turbo I6 3.8L twin-turbo V6 (VR38DETT)
gearbox 7-SPEED AUTOMATIC (DCT) 6-SPEED AUTOMATED SEQUENTIAL TRANSMISSION WITH MANUAL MODE
drive Type RWD AWD
wheelbase (MM) 2812 2779
width (MM) 1869 1895
length (MM) 4671 4671
height (MM) 1389 1369
0 - 60 MPH 4 SECs 3 SECs
top Speed (KPH) 280 315
price MSRP $ 103,100 $ 113,540
Current Value $ 92,000 $ 85,000
OVERALL VS AVERAGE LAP TIMES -4.98s -5.85s

BMW M4 CS F82 M4 CS F82 — Lap Times vs Average

Treadwear/MOD LEVEL Stock/Light S/L Medium Med Heavy/Race H/R
>200 -5.49s
141–200 -5.49s -5.49s
100–140 -7.3s -7.3s
0–99 -7.3s -7.48s -7.48s

Nissan GT-R R35 GT-R R35 — Lap Times vs Average

Treadwear/MOD LEVEL Stock/Light S/L Medium Med Heavy/Race H/R
>200 -0.77s -8.56s
141–200 -2.3s -8.56s -8.56s
100–140 -2.3s -8.56s -10.78s
0–99 -6s -8.56s -10.78s
Comments
outlined_flag Report Wrong Data