Wheelsboy
Wheelsboy: English-language insight into China’s fast-moving EV market
Wheelsboy is an English-language automotive media channel focused on the Chinese car market. It is especially valuable for EV viewers because China is now one of the most important and competitive electric-vehicle markets in the world, and many of the cars shown on Wheelsboy are difficult or impossible for viewers in Europe, North America, and other regions to experience directly. The channel gives English-speaking audiences a rare look at Chinese EVs, plug-in hybrids, luxury models, concept cars, and new brands that are reshaping the global car industry.
The channel is closely associated with Ethan Robertson, a North Carolina-raised, Shanghai-based automotive reviewer and co-founder of Wheelsboy. Reuters described him in 2026 as an American YouTuber guiding international visitors around Chinese high-tech cars, and noted that Wheelsboy specializes in Chinese cars for English-speaking audiences. That international perspective is central to the channel’s value: Ethan understands the Chinese car market from inside China, but explains it in a way that Western viewers can follow.
Wheelsboy is best suited to viewers who want to understand Chinese EVs before they become familiar in their own markets. It is especially useful for EV enthusiasts, industry watchers, import-market followers, and buyers curious about brands such as BYD, NIO, XPeng, Zeekr, Li Auto, Deepal, Leapmotor, Aito, Xiaomi, Denza, Hongqi, and other Chinese manufacturers. The channel is less about helping someone choose a local dealer-stock EV today and more about showing where the global EV market is heading.
A major strength of Wheelsboy is access. The channel regularly covers cars that many other English-language reviewers cannot easily test, including China-only models, early launches, auto-show debuts, and highly advanced domestic-market EVs. This makes it one of the better sources for seeing how quickly Chinese brands are developing in areas such as cabin technology, screens, software, assisted driving, value for money, luxury features, charging, and battery-electric or range-extender powertrains.
The channel’s content includes car reviews, first drives, comparisons, auto-show coverage, market explainers, and broader commentary on the Chinese automotive industry. Wheelsboy’s own website describes it as a leading English-language automotive media outlet in China, providing a unique glimpse into the changing Chinese car market. That makes the channel more specialized than a normal international car-review outlet: its core topic is not simply cars, but China’s rapidly evolving car industry.
The geek level is moderate. Wheelsboy covers EV-specific topics such as battery size, range, charging, software, interior technology, driver-assistance systems, powertrain layout, and market positioning, but it is not primarily a deep technical testing channel. Viewers looking for standardized highway range tests, detailed charging-curve analysis, winter efficiency data, battery chemistry, or engineering-level teardown content will usually need more specialized EV channels. Wheelsboy’s strength is context, access, and market interpretation.
Wheelsboy’s EV stance is generally EV-positive and China-market-aware, but not purely promotional. The channel clearly recognizes the speed and seriousness of Chinese EV development, and it often highlights how competitive Chinese brands have become in technology, interior design, features, and price. At the same time, its reviews can still discuss weaknesses, odd design choices, market hype, quality differences, and the challenge of translating Chinese-market success into global-market acceptance.
A distinctive part of the channel is that it helps viewers understand cars that do not always fit familiar Western categories. Chinese-market vehicles often include features, pricing strategies, software ecosystems, rear-seat luxury priorities, range-extender powertrains, and brand positioning that can feel unusual to European or North American viewers. Wheelsboy is useful because it does not just show these cars; it explains why they exist and what Chinese buyers value.
Production quality is polished and professional, with a clear presenter-led style. The videos are generally easy to follow, visually clean, and more accessible than reading translated launch coverage or specification sheets. Ethan’s bilingual and cross-cultural position helps make the channel feel credible for viewers trying to understand a market that can otherwise seem confusing from the outside.
Wheelsboy also has a wider platform beyond YouTube, including its website and Wheelsboy Select. Wheelsboy Select describes Ethan Robertson as a co-founder who has reviewed more than 250 cars in China and the US, and says the wider Wheelsboy team has built a large cross-platform audience. This broader activity reinforces the channel’s role as a bridge between Chinese automotive products and international viewers.
The main limitation is that many of the cars covered are not available in every viewer’s local market. For North American viewers in particular, Wheelsboy can sometimes feel like a window into cars they cannot buy. However, that is also part of the channel’s appeal. It shows what is happening in the world’s most aggressive EV market before those trends fully reach other regions.
Overall, Wheelsboy is one of the most useful English-language channels for understanding Chinese electric cars and the wider Chinese automotive market. It is not the most technical EV testing channel and not a conventional buyer-review outlet for local-market shoppers. Its value lies in access, context, and explanation: helping viewers understand the brands, technology, design choices, and competitive pressure coming from China’s EV industry.
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