Modern naked bikes are faster than ever, but very few are actually approachable outside a racetrack. Somewhere along the way, the segment became obsessed with chasing bigger numbers, sharper handling, and increasingly wild styling. That’s great for headlines and spec sheets, but not every rider wants a machine that rides like it’s trying to fight them every time traffic slows down or the road surface gets rough.

The modern hyper-naked class has become a strange arms race. Manufacturers keep stuffing superbike engines into upright motorcycles, then adding ultra-stiff suspension, razor-sharp throttle maps, and ergonomics that demand constant attention. The result is a category full of bikes that are deeply impressive for about 20 minutes before exhaustion starts setting in. Some tend to be twitchy at lower speeds, others dump all their power at once, and many seem happier chasing lap times than surviving a commute.

That’s what makes the current state of the segment so interesting. Riders aren’t necessarily asking for less performance. They just want performance that’s easier to access and easier to enjoy. A naked bike should be exciting without constantly reminding you that its engine came from a homologation special capable of humiliating superbikes on a straightaway. The best ones manage to combine speed with trust, and that balance is becoming surprisingly rare.

With motorcycles getting excessively expensive, speed on a budget is mostly reserved for the used market. And these 10 nakeds prove that well

Horsepower numbers still matter, but they’re no longer the entire story. Riders have become more aware of how a bike actually behaves outside a perfectly smooth canyon road or racetrack. Throttle response, chassis communication, seat comfort, wind protection, and electronic refinement matter just as much now, especially when motorcycles regularly produce well over 150 horsepower. A bike can be brutally fast and still frustrating to ride every day.

That shift in priorities has quietly separated the genuinely great naked bikes from the ones that exist purely for shock value. Riders are starting to gravitate toward machines more cohesive rather than chaotic. They want bikes that inspire confidence instead of intimidation. They want something thrilling enough for a Sunday blast, but civilized enough for a weekday commute. Very few motorcycles manage to hit all those targets without compromising somewhere along the line.

That’s exactly why the Aprilia Tuono V4 continues to stand out in a crowded segment full of increasingly aggressive rivals. While many manufacturers lean heavily into brute force and edgy styling, Aprilia’s formula seems far more complete. The current Tuono V4 takes the company’s RSV4 superbike DNA and reshapes it into something that's genuinely usable on normal roads without watering down the experience that makes it special in the first place.

The latest model uses a 1,099cc V4 engine producing 180 horsepower and 89.2 pound-feet of torque, paired to a six-speed gearbox with a standard quickshifter. Unlike some high-strung naked bikes that are peaky or abrupt, the Tuono delivers its performance with an addictive level of smoothness and predictability. It’s brutally fast when pushed hard, but never nervous or overwhelming at sane speeds. That’s a surprisingly difficult balance to achieve in this category.

The V4 engine is the centerpiece of the entire experience. It pulls hard throughout the rev range, sounds absolutely feral at full throttle, and still manages to be refined during slower riding. Aprilia’s APRC electronics suite also deserves a huge amount of credit here. The bike comes loaded with traction control, wheelie control, launch control, engine braking adjustment, cruise control, cornering ABS, multiple ride modes, and the new Aprilia Slide Control system.

Aprilia also updated the Tuono’s traction and wheelie control systems with predictive and adaptive algorithms that react more intelligently depending on riding conditions. Instead of feeling intrusive or abrupt, the electronics work naturally in the background and make the bike ride smoother and more confidence-inspiring. The ergonomics also help massively here. Compared to a full superbike, the upright riding position and wider bars make the motorcycle dramatically easier to live with without losing its sharp edge.

APRC electronics suite; Predictive and adaptive traction control; Predictive and adaptive wheelie control; Aprilia Slide Control (ASC); Launch control; Engine brake control; Multiple ride modes; Cornering ABS; Cruise control; TFT display; Quickshifter

Tuono V4: $16,699 | Tuono V4 Factory: $19,799

The chassis setup is where the Tuono V4 really separates itself from many rivals. It uses Aprilia’s aluminum twin-spar frame paired with a beautifully calibrated suspension setup that manages to be sporty without becoming punishing. The standard bike gets fully adjustable suspension, while the Tuono V4 Factory adds semi-active Öhlins Smart EC 2.0 suspension for riders who want an even sharper edge. Wet weight comes in at approximately 465 pounds, helping the bike feel surprisingly agile for a liter-class machine.

What really stands out is how transparent and connected the handling is. The front end communicates clearly, mid-corner stability is excellent, and the bike never feels like it’s trying to outsmart the rider. Some hyper nakeds tend to be hyperactive or twitchy once the pace increases, but the Tuono remains composed and planted. Brembo brakes provide immense stopping power without feeling grabby, while the electronics help smooth out mistakes rather than punish them.

Front: 43mm fully adjustable inverted fork | Rear: Fully adjustable monoshock (Factory variant gets semi-active Öhlins Smart EC 2.0 suspension)

Front: Dual 330mm discs with Brembo calipers | Rear: Single 220mm disc

Front: 17-inch wheel / 120-section tire | Rear: 17-inch wheel / 200-section tire

Italian? Check. V4 engine? Check. More powerful and cheaper than the Panigale? Check and check!

The Tuono’s biggest advantage might actually be its personality. Plenty of naked bikes are fast. Plenty handle well. Very few are this alive without becoming exhausting. The V4 engine gives the motorcycle a character that’s difficult to replicate, especially now that so many performance bikes are becoming too clinically efficient. There’s still a sense of drama here, but it’s paired with enough refinement that the bike never feels immature or chaotic.

Styling also plays a role in why the Tuono stands apart. It looks aggressive without falling into the exaggerated transformer aesthetic that dominates parts of the naked bike market right now. The compact proportions, sharp LED lighting, and MotoGP-inspired aerodynamic winglets give the motorcycle a distinct identity without looking cartoonish. Even years after its debut, the Tuono is still a genuinely special machine instead of another interchangeable entry in the hyper naked arms race.

For all its exotic performance credentials, the Tuono V4 is shockingly manageable as an everyday motorcycle. The riding position is comfortable enough for longer trips, the cruise control makes highway riding far less tiring, and the electronics are intuitive enough that you don’t need an engineering degree just to customize the bike. Even the wind protection is better than expected, thanks to the small front fairing and aerodynamic design.

That’s ultimately what makes the Tuono V4 so impressive. It doesn’t force riders to choose between excitement and usability. It delivers the sound, speed, and emotional appeal expected from a high-end Italian motorcycle, but combines those traits with real-world comfort and genuine approachability. Pricing starts at $16,699 for the standard Tuono V4, while the more premium Tuono V4 Factory starts at $19,799 in the US.

In a segment full of machines trying desperately to prove how extreme they are, the Tuono V4 succeeds simply because of how well-rounded it is. It’s fast without being exhausting, sophisticated without being sterile, and practical without losing its edge. Plenty of naked bikes can impress riders during a short test ride. Very few still ride this well once the novelty wears off and everyday riding begins.

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Source: https://www.topspeed.com/streetfighter-nails-performance-control-everyday-ease/