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10 Most Genius Sports Cars Killed by Bad Timing! Forgotten sports cars deserve the spotlight, and this video brings back twelve legends that changed the game but slipped from memory. From the tiny Honda S800 with its screaming 791cc engine revving to 8500 RPM to the daring Lancia 037 Stradale that beat the odds in the 1983 World Rally Championship, every chapter is packed with drama, sound, and smart engineering. You will see the Kaiser Darrin, the first American fiberglass sports car prototype with sliding doors, and the Aston Martin DP215, a Le Mans missile that met heartbreak when the gearbox failed. We dig into the Triumph TR8, the English Corvette with real V8 pace, and Toyota 222D, a secret mid engine rally monster built for a class that never arrived. Nissan R390 GT1 shows what a true homologation special looks like, with road car roots tied to a carbon race chassis. Then we reveal three amazing yet forgotten sixties machines, the Oldsmobile Jetfire with America’s first mass produced turbocharged engine and Rocket Fluid injection, the Monica 560 luxury sedan that chased Ferrari level speed, and the Monteverdi High Speed 375S, a Swiss supercar with Italian style and American power. We keep the pace fast, the facts clear, and the storytelling sharp so you never feel lost. The S800 proves Honda mastery of small high rev power, the 037 shows how light weight and supercharging can still beat heavy rivals, and the DP215 reminds us that one weak part can end a dream. The TR8, 222D, and R390 GT1 highlight how rules, budgets, and timing decide winners and losers, not just horsepower. You will learn key specs, real world performance, production numbers, and why each car failed or faded, yet still earns respect today. ____ We do not own the footages/images compiled in this video. It belongs to individual creators or organizations that deserve respect. By creatively transforming the footages from other videos, this work qualifies as fair use and complies with U.S. copyright law without causing any harm to the original work's market value. COPYRIGHT DISCLAIMER: Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research. _____