The Toyota RAV4 established the compact crossover segment way back in 1996, but Nissan is only now fielding an entry, the Rogue. Although the name might suggest an aberrant or at least atypical approach, the Rogue rides comfortably in the wake of the RAV4 and the Honda CR-V.
Unlike the trucklike-and-proud-of-it Xterra, which had been Nissan's sole effort to net shoppers of lower-priced SUVs, the Rogue takes a mainstream approach, with a car-based, unibody chassis, a four-cylinder engine, and front- or all-wheel drive. No V-6 is offered, lest the Rogue crowd its (slightly) bigger brother, the Nissan Murano, even more than it does already.
Like the Murano, the Rogue offers only one transmission, a CVT. Nissan embraces this technology more so than any other automaker, and the example in the Rogue is one of the best we've driven--you could almost forget it's not a conventional automatic gearbox. The Rogue's electric power steering is also commendably conventional-feeling, with just-right efforts. Nissan has tuned its small crossover for responsive cornering, but the downside is a ride that delivers sharp kicks over bumps.... Read full article