Volkswagen W12

The Volkswagen W12 (also known as the Volkswagen W12 Nardò or Volkswagen W12 Syncro) is a concept car made by Volkswagen appearing in the Asphalt series.

Overview
The Volkswagen W12 is a series of concept sports cars made by Volkswagen, with the 1997 W12 Syncro, the 1998 W12 Roadster and the 2001 W12 Nardò, the latter of which is used in the Asphalt series. The Volkswagen W12 and the Bentley Continental GT V8 are the two cars in the Asphalt series that use a Bentley engine.

Created by Charlie Adair and unveiled at the 2001 Tokyo Motor Show, the W12 Nardò concept features a 5.6L W12 engine producing 441 kW (591 bhp / 600 PS). It was claimed to accelerate from a standstill to 100 km/h (62.1 mph) in 3.5 seconds, as well as a purported top speed of 221.9 mph (357.2 km/h).

Asphalt 8: Airborne
The Volkswagen W12 is one of the 11 new cars introduced in the Winter update, as well as the first Volkswagen car being introduced in the game. The second Volkswagen car being introduced in the game is the Volkswagen Golf Design Vision GTI.

The Volkswagen W12 is currently the third most powerful Class A car in the game, with a starting rank of 1503 (second highest of any Class A car), a maximum rank of 1624, and a final rank of 1706. The title for the strongest Class A car belongs to the Ferrari 330 P4. The Volkswagen W12 tends to accelerate swiftly with its high-power, long-duration nitro activated. The W12's top speed is rather impressive, matching that of the Lamborghini Veneno. Thanks to the all-wheel-drive system, the W12 can corner with ease. However, like with the Lotus Exige S Roadster-Audi RS 4 Avant situation, the W12 has a slightly shorter nitro duration than the McLaren P1 (which has a nitro boost speed of 17.7~26.6 mph, compared to the W12's 18.6~28.0 mph).

The Volkswagen W12's competitors are the Ferrari F430, Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren, Lamborghini Gallardo SE and the BMW Nazca M12 Italdesign.

The Volkswagen W12 costs and  to max out, same as the Savage Rivale Roadyacht GTS. It was originally priced, but was later reduced to in February 2015.