“The Q8 is our first premium SUV,” said one of Audi's management team at a presentation this afternoon ahead of the car’s reveal. Eh?

The firm considers none of his SUVs launches thus far to be premium? Not quite: their point refers to the ‘8’ badge in the Q8’s name, which is reserved for its range-topping models - and this is the first time it’s arrived on an SUV.

Audi targets GLE Coupeà and X6 with stylish new Q8 SUV

“There’s a clear hierarchy. The all-new Q8 is the clear leader in the Audi segment, an iconic design and a powerful one.”

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That’s significant, for we are now at a point where one of the big three German brands considers a luxury SUV rather than a luxury saloon to be the pinnacle of its brand - echoing sister brand Volkswagen, which refers to the recently launched Touareg as the ‘flagship’ of its range.

A pinnacle of its brand launched outside of Germany, too. The launch location of the Q8, Shenzhen, is no coincidence. It shows Audi’s commitment to the Chinese market where it has topped the premium sales charts for 30 years, and also to Shenzhen, widely acknowledged as the tech capital of China.

China is a market where Audi will launch 10 new SUVs by 2022, seven of them built here. A place too where it’ll launch another five ‘new energy vehicles’, electrified models for China, four of which will be built here.

It’s a market where Audi has launched its own vast dedicated R&D centre to build and tailor cars specifically to Chinese tastes, and one that has become one of its key global proving grounds in the development of autonomous vehicles, in a market that is showing far greater and more open acceptance to their arrival.