Never mind the fact that the brochure depicts the Indonesian-market Daihatsu Sirion Cross (the Perodua Myvi is sold in Indonesia as the Daihatsu Sirion), we noticed some errors that indicates that the brochure is most likely a fake.
For starters, we noticed that the Daihatsu tagline used in the brochure differs from the one from Daihatsu’s own website – on the brochure it says Sahabat Daihatsu, but the website says Daihatsu Sahabatku.
Then there’s the wheels of the alleged Myvi Cross – those wheels are lifted directly off the Japanese-market Toyota Raize.
Furthermore, the interior photos are riddled with errors. Not only are the new features already available on the existing Sirion/Myvi, we also noticed that the alleged new beige door trim colour is missing from the larger interior photo.
Curiously, with this being an alleged Indonesian-market car, our media friends from Indonesia have yet to publish anything about it, which leads us to believe that this could be an elaborate April Fool’s joke.
Started from the IT industry but somehow managed to find his way into the automotive industry. If he’s not gaming, he’s constantly tinkering with his daily/weekend car.