I've wanted a car since this summer. Previously driving my brother's Geely Boyue, I shifted from sedans like Arrizo 8, Lavida, and Bora to domestic SUVs, attracted by the third-generation SAIC Motor Roewe RX5. The seats offer excellent support and wrapping, with an integrated headrest and bucket-seat-like design. The floating large screen, leather materials, crystal gear lever, and matte central tunnel are impressive, though the screen has thick black borders and the front passenger plastic may dull over time. At 172cm and 60kg, I have ample legroom in the back, and the trunk is spacious enough for three people's shoes with room to spare; folding seats allow for a flat sleeping space. The 1.5T turbo engine with wet dual-clutch transmission delivers good acceleration and a smooth ride, with lighter steering and improved chassis over the first-gen RX5 and Boyue. Fuel consumption is surprising: 370 yuan fills the tank, lasting about 720km with mixed highway and city driving (average speed 50-60km/h). Drawbacks include no glasses case, limited voice assistant intelligence (only navigation works well), and persistent rear seatbelt reminders even when occupied.