10 Supercars That Look Like They Belong in a Sci-Fi Movie

Some cars are fast. Some are rare. And then there are the ones that look like they were reverse-engineered from a spaceship. These supercars ditch convention for design that’s borderline alien—sharp lines, wild aero, glowing lights, and shapes that barely look street legal. Whether they’re electric, gas-powered, or still in the prototype phase, every one of these machines looks like it rolled straight off a sci-fi set. If your dream garage doubles as a launch bay, these 10 are the ones that belong in it.

Lamborghini Terzo Millennio

Image Credit: SupercarsNews/YouTube.

The Terzo Millennio looks like something Batman would special order. Built as a design study with MIT, it ditches traditional batteries for supercapacitors and imagines a future where cars self-heal and manage energy through the bodywork.

There’s no production version, but the sharp angles, glowing wheels, and cab-forward stance scream science fiction. It doesn’t have an engine—yet—but it’s not really about specs. It’s about what a Lambo could look like in 2040.

Tesla Cybertruck (Tri-Motor AWD)

Image Credit: Mecum.

Love it or hate it, the Cybertruck has the presence of a prop straight out of Blade Runner. With its angular stainless steel body, LED light bar, and no curves anywhere, it looks like something you’d see rolling through a post-apocalyptic wasteland.

The tri-motor AWD version is no slouch either—0–60 in 2.6 seconds and a projected top speed over 130 mph. It’s technically a truck, but it’ll outrun most cars on the road—and turn more heads doing it.

Devel Sixteen

Image Credit: Supercar Blondie/YouTube.

This thing looks like it was designed with cheat codes. With a pointed nose, stretched body, and jet-fighter canopy, the Devel Sixteen doesn’t really look street legal—because it kind of isn’t yet.

The top-tier version is said to use a 12.3L V16 making 5,007 horsepower. Yes, five thousand. While actual performance data is still in the air, the car’s appearance alone makes it feel like it belongs in a video game or movie chase scene.

McLaren Speedtail

Image Credit: Mecum.

The Speedtail is McLaren’s take on a hypercar for the future. It has a 1,055-horsepower hybrid powertrain, hits 250 mph, and looks more spaceship than car with its teardrop shape and insanely long tail.

The driver sits in the center with two passenger seats flanking it—just like the old F1. The design is sleek and seamless, with covered front wheels and a shape that cheats wind as much as possible. Park it next to anything else, and it still looks like it’s from another planet.

Rimac Nevera

Image Credit: Rimac Automobili.

The Rimac Nevera isn’t just electric—it’s absurd. With four motors and 1,914 horsepower, it goes 0–60 in 1.85 seconds and can top 250 mph. That’s not a typo. It’s one of the fastest cars on the planet.

Its clean, low-slung look with aero channels and carbon fiber everywhere gives it a futuristic vibe that actually matches the performance. And since it’s all EV, it does it all in eerie silence, like some stealthy sci-fi assassin.

Lotus Evija

Image Credit: By Calreyn88 – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, /Wikimedia Commons.

The Lotus Evija’s styling is all about airflow. Its dramatic rear tunnels look like something out of a wind tunnel experiment—and they are. It’s fully electric, making around 2,000 horsepower with a sub-3-second 0–60.

The side profile is low and sculpted, but the real scene-stealer is out back, where light beams cut through the open rear vents like a portal to another dimension. If Lotus builds spacecraft someday, this is the template.

Koenigsegg Jesko Absolut

Image Credit: Koenigsegg.

With a claimed top speed north of 330 mph, the Jesko Absolut isn’t just fast—it looks it. Koenigsegg removed the massive rear wing from the standard Jesko to reduce drag, giving it a cleaner, more alien-like profile.

It’s powered by a twin-turbo 5.0L V8 making up to 1,600 horsepower on E85. But forget the engine for a second—this thing looks like it’s designed to bend time and space, not just crush lap records.

Faraday Future FF 91

Image Credit: Marques Brownlee/YouTube.

The FF 91 looks like it was beamed in from the future. It’s technically an electric luxury crossover, but the design leans hard into sci-fi territory with sleek LED strips, no grille, and an ultra-smooth body.

With 1,050 horsepower and a 0–60 time under 2.4 seconds, it’s not just a concept—it’s real, even if production’s been rocky. Inside, it’s all screens, ambient light, and recliner-style rear seats, like a spaceship lounge on wheels.

Apollo Intensa Emozione

Image Credit: Mike Supercars TopSpeed (Supercars Miami)/YouTube.

The Apollo IE is pure madness. With exposed carbon fiber, razor-sharp bodywork, and active aero that looks like it might deploy a forcefield, the car looks like it was built by a movie effects team.

It’s powered by a naturally aspirated 6.3L V12, making 780 horsepower and revving to 9,000 rpm. Everything about it feels theatrical, from the sounds to the shapes to the sheer drama of seeing one in motion.

Bugatti Bolide

Image Credit: Calreyn88 – Own work, CC0, Wikimedia Commons.

Bugatti took the already outrageous Chiron and stripped it down for the track to create the Bolide. The result? A body that looks like it belongs on the set of a sci-fi epic—low, wide, and full of ducts, fins, and carbon.

With 1,578 horsepower and a curb weight under 3,200 pounds, it’s all go. But it’s the look that really sets it apart. You could tell someone this was a prototype for a movie about racing on Mars, and they’d probably believe you.

*This article was hand crafted with AI-powered tools and has been car-fully, I mean carefully, reviewed by our editors.

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