Discussion: Does pink belong on an off-roader?

Laura
Jan 30, 2026
Moderator Staff member

Administrator

Jan 30, 2026

When Ford brought back Bronco, the goal was to get people outside and off-road in an SUV that could handle the wild. The 2020 press release introduced a younger audience to the history of the legendary vehicle and reminded Gen 1-5 owners of the power and fun the 4x4s provided for decades:

“Bronco gave rise to the fun and versatile off-road SUV in 1966, becoming the first enjoyable sport utility vehicle for those who wanted to live, work and play outdoors,” said Jim Farley, Ford chief operating officer. “Like the original, the all-new Bronco family is engineered to take you to epic places, with capability to deliver confidence on any type of terrain.”

“Bronco delivers on the common thread desired by enthusiasts – authenticity,” said Mark Grueber, Ford U.S. consumer marketing manager at the time of the release. “Building Bronco as Ford’s distinct outdoor brand includes a unique network of experiences, community and engagement that extends far beyond ownership of Bronco and Bronco Sport models.”

Bronco’s defining outdoor-focused features were later revealed to include a transfer case, available locking differentials, bash plates, and underbody protection, and fun-to-get-dirty and easy-to-clean materials. Enthusiasts had no doubt that this vehicle was tough and made to be used.

It was also created to be modular, from the Accessory Ready points to the heavy-duty bumpers, top options, and more, with the goal of letting you make your Bronco your own.

Fast Forward to Deliveries and the Present
This is where it gets interesting: People began modifying and accessorizing their vehicles in a way you wouldn’t. Tune into any forum, subreddit, or Facebook group, and you’ll see people removing trail sights, adding low-profile tires and big rims, or doing a spare tire delete.

While some owners don’t see the purpose of turning a 4x4 into a street-only vehicle, others say they bought it, let them do what they want, whether that’s softening the look or never letting it touch dirt.

So, the question is, does the Bronco brand only equal “rugged” in your mind, or can share space with a floral-wrapped Bronco that may never leave the pavement –– or one that does?

What appearance choices do you think go too far on a Bronco? What takes away from that highly capable and durable aesthetic? Is it graphics? Colors? A factory special edition collab?

Should Broncos be saved for the off-roaders or outdoorsy owners who want to make use of the 4-wheel-drive benefits, or are they equally at home in the driveways of people who want in on their cool looks and open-air concept, who may or may not get that the knobby tire sounds, trail drives, and washable interiors are part of the fun? Do brightly colored, fun Broncos belong around campfires and on the toughest Moab trails, or should they look like they blend in with nature?

If the Bronco world becomes flooded with grumpy bumpers and sparkly accessories, driven by owners who might not align with the original values and intent, or trims are introduced that don't match your idea of Bronco, does the brand lose some worth to you? What will make you leave the brand, or are you in it for life, no matter what other owners do or Ford releases from factory?
2021 Oxford White 2-door non-Sas Mid package 2.7L/10-speed Badlands with MIC top
2021 Carbonized Gray 2-door Sas High package 2.7L/10-speed Badlands with MIC top
Keeping the Jeeps: stock '89 XJ, 3.5" lifted '00 XJ on 31s and '89 MJ
Holly10sun, TK1215

Rank 42

Today at 6:04 am

#140
This comes up a lot, and honestly I think it’s just a culture thing.

Jeep had decades where ownership was a smaller, more uniform group, so the wave became a way of saying “you’re one of us.” Bronco came back in a totally different world. From day one it was built to be a big tent—2-door, 4-door, family rigs, trail rigs, daily drivers, hardcore builds, and everything in between.

Because of that, Bronco culture connects more when it matters, not just because we passed each other on the road. The recognition usually happens at trailheads, airing down, spotting, recoveries, gas stations, or standing around comparing mods—not at 65 mph.

It’s not that Bronco owners aren’t friendly. It’s just less about rituals and more about shared moments. You’re way more likely to get a nod, a thumbs up, or a “you good?” when you actually stop and talk.

Different brand, different vibe. And honestly, I’m fine with that.

I’ll add this though: I do wave at other Broncos that are clearly used off-road. Mud, pinstripes, rock rash, armor, aired-down tires… that stuff’s recognizable.

That’s usually when you get the wave back too. Not because of the badge, but because there’s a shared understanding: yeah, you actually use it. Heck, I've been known to wave at Jeeps! Want to see a shocked expression...

In the 70s, I had a friend who drove a Saab. I asked about Sab drivers always waving to each other. He said, Some think we wave because of the camaraderie of owning this uncommon and special vehicle. But really, we are just acknowledging the money and effort the other guy spent to keep the stupid car on the road...

There may be Bronco folks who share that opinion... :-)
Jakob1972, TK1215

Rank 42

Today at 6:18 am

#141
I don’t know how I feel about a 4-door Stroppe I guess I have to see it in real life. But I would feel better if the special broncos were kept special. The Everglades was special because when it was unveiled it was the only one with flat fenders, different wheels, Desert Sand paint, mid package with larger touchscreen, winch, snorkel, 2.3l, automatic , and the big sticker. Now the only thing that makes mine special is the snorkel and sticker. And I know Ford kept building Everglades until they built more than the heritage limited. That is why the off-roadeos have so many Everglades. At least that is my take on it. We still don’t have build numbers.

AND, the rear cargo pull out table! At the Off Roadeo, Dani showed us that, and it is the coolest thing about the Everglades, IMO...
Jakob1972, TK1215

Gladesmen

Today at 6:47 pm

#142
AND, the rear cargo pull out table! At the Off Roadeo, Dani showed us that, and it is the coolest thing about the Everglades, IMO...

except the first year Everglades. We didn’t get the pull out tailgate. It was an option only, and I didn’t want anything to slow production of my Bronco. The only option I had was Desert Sand and that was a late production color. As it was, I got my MY 22 in November 2022.
BN 1100, Desert Sand Everglades. Reservation 7/30/20. ordered 1/22/21, reordered 10/15/21 dropped tow and hard top, reordered 3/9/22 changed to Everglades. production date 9/7/22 rescheduled 9/14/22 completed 9/26/22, shipped 10/7/22, arrived 10/31/22, delivered 11/03/22
Unicorn

Rank I

Today at 7:50 pm

#143
Was looking at some color ppf, here's a blue and a purple. Maybe set it off with a white hard top.

I love that Blue for a bronco, I guess I'm partial as I have Velocity Blue ! Side note, I am trying to get something like the purple for my Mini Cooper. Great choices

You must log in or register to post here.