“Mopar ‘23” Charger & Challenger Play Farewell Tour

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

If there’s one thing at which Stellantis excels, besides stuffing the largest engine they can find into most of their models, it’s the creation of endless special editions to create a bit of buzz. This time, the subjects need no further promotion – but they’re getting it anyway.


We’re talking, of course, about the Charger and Challenger, two cars that are set to ride into the sunset at the end of this year and whose order books actually close at the end of this month. With a host of ‘Last Call’ and sundry variants on offer, not to mention a buying frenzy spurred by Dodge’s choice to list Charger and Challenger dealer allocation on a public website, the old-school muscle nameplates don’t really need another kick-in-the-pants special edition. Yet, here we are.


It's called the Mopar ’23 and, as you’ve surmised, is a product of the parts and performance arm at the company. Limited to 220 copies each (200 for America and 20 for Canada), the Mopar ’23 adds a yaffle of exterior and interior details not found on other trims. Using an R/T Scat Pack Widebody as its base, the special edition shows up in any color you want so long as it’s black with a skiff of blue tracer stripe along its body.

Brake calipers are also done in blue, 20-inch aluminum hoops are at each corner, and its carbon-fiber decklid spoiler is allegedly one not yet seen on other trims. Appealing to the Barrett-Jackson crowd, each car comes with a personalized metal certificate of authenticity with serialized vehicle-build number plus a dandy special rendering of the car by the Mopar design team. 


The rest of the car is familiar to anyone who knows the Charger and Challenger brochure: Widebody flares add 3.5 inches of width over 305-section Pirellis, Bilstein shocks have three modes, its seats have Alcantara surfaces, the headliner is crafted from suede, and a raft of Scat Pack logos are scattered about. In case you’ve forgotten, this trim is endowed with the 392 Hemi V8 engine, good for 485 horsepower, and able to be fitted with a Tremec 6-speed manual on the Challenger.


Price for the package sits at $3,995. Production is planned to start in September with deliveries expected to begin in October.


[Images: Stellantis]


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Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

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  • Analoggrotto Analoggrotto on Jul 26, 2023

    only fans edition

  • Lou_BC Lou_BC on Jul 27, 2023

    As long as they don't spring another Limited Edition badge on others, this may be a collectible.

    Are they going to do something to distinguish between the 200 USA units and the 20 for Canada or is it same car with 220 up for grabs?

  • Kjhkjlhkjhkljh kljhjkhjklhkjh no underbody .. and no shots of the fender bits near the edges ... but if there is no real rust this is peachy
  • Arthur Dailey Why enter into trade agreements with a) nations whose standards of living are not comparable to yours, b) nations with little or no environmental legislation/protections, c) nations with little to no protections for workers regarding health and safety and employment standards, d) nations whose interests are opposed to yours, e) nations that are not democracies or actively oppose democracy?Trading with 'friendly' and 'like minded' nations with comparable standards of living, is rational and reasonable.Otherwise you are actively subverting your own nation's economy, and the standards of living of its workers. Better to have 'well paying' jobs and goods that are slightly more expensive, than cheap goods and 'bad' jobs.Without its manufacturing and research capacity the USA would no longer be the 'arsenal of democracy'.
  • Bd2 This is a close copycat of the Hyundai Pony Coupe designed Geegario back in in 1979, the most influential sportscar wedge of all time. I'm having a wedge salad, btw.
  • 3-On-The-Tree It does have that blacked out police vibe to it. Not a HK or Heckler and Koch fan but I do like the way it looks. I drove M1151 up armored Humvees in Mosul Iraq and this Kia looks more tactical than our vehicles.
  • Dwford Are tariffs the right answer? Yes. You can't have free trade between a high wage country and a low wage country. Jobs will naturally flow towards the low wage country, as we have seen for the last 40 years. We have voluntarily handed China its economic strength. Time to moderate that.
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