Toyota is heading into the Tokyo Auto Salon with that familiar twinkle in its eye, and Gazoo Racing is doing the teasing. On social media, the brand has been posting faux text-message exchanges featuring Akio Toyoda’s “Morizo” persona, and one line in particular has lit up the enthusiast corners of the internet: talk of a “new midship two-seater” that Toyoda has supposedly “obtained.” No shadowy photo. No silhouette. Just enough mystery to get everyone arguing in the comments.
The timing is what makes it feel like more than a random show car. Toyota has been flirting with MR2 talk for a while now, including earlier hints and, more recently, fresh trademark activity that keeps the name in the conversation. When you pair that with GR’s steady expansion and Toyota’s recent habit of turning concepts into real projects, it is not hard to see why people are reading this as another breadcrumb on the trail to a modern MR2.
//#東京オートサロン まであと「6」日
\\#モリゾウ が手に入れたミッドシップ2シーターの新しいクルマとは!?
果たして東京オートサロンまでにカスタムは間に合うのか?#tokyoautosalon2026@tokyoautosalon pic.twitter.com/FvfWujEEre— TOYOTA GAZOO Racing (@TOYOTA_GR) January 3, 2026
Of course, “midship two-seater” leaves a lot of room for interpretation. It could be a true clean-sheet concept meant to preview a future production model. It could be an existing platform reworked into something spicy for the show floor. It could even be a lovingly modified older MR2 built as a passion project, which would still accomplish Toyota’s real goal here: reminding everyone that it remembers what fun feels like.
What makes the MR2 rumor feel plausible is how neatly it would fit into the current GR universe. With the Supra nearing the end of its run and the GR lineup already spanning the GR86 and various hot hatch flavors, a mid-engine sports car could slide right into the gap. Something attainable, lightweight, and playful would give Toyota a different kind of performance identity than the bigger, more serious stuff it has been hinting at with halo projects like the GR GT and related concepts.
And even if the Tokyo Auto Salon is traditionally more about tuning culture and manufacturer-backed customization than big global debuts, Toyota has been using it like a playground for enthusiast-minded reveals. The show has become a place where GR can test ideas, gauge reactions, and sometimes set the stage years in advance. So whether this “midship two-seater” turns out to be the first real wink at an MR2 comeback or just another beautifully weird GR experiment, it is the kind of tease that keeps the brand’s performance story moving forward.
Source: Road & Track

Mike Floyd is a finance executive by trade and a car enthusiast at heart. As a CFO with a keen eye for detail and strategy, Mike brings his analytical mindset to the automotive world, uncovering fresh insights and unique perspectives that go beyond the surface. His passion for cars—especially his favorite, the Porsche 911, fuels his contributions to Automotive Addicts, where he blends a love for performance and design with his professional precision. Whether he’s breaking down industry trends or spotlighting emerging innovations, Mike helps keep the site both sharp and forward-thinking.