The Leapmotor B05 might be the most convincing car the Chinese brand has shown us so far.

That’s a fairly big call, because the B10 small electric SUV already proved Leapmotor is capable of producing something that feels far more mature than its price point might suggest. Nonetheless, the small B05 hatchback does that in a smaller, lower and arguably more interesting package.

Think of it as Leapmotor’s answer to the MG 4. It’s an electric hatch, it’s rear-wheel drive, it has proper multi-link rear suspension, and it is expected to land in Australia at a price that should make it one of the more compelling electric vehicles (EVs) in the small-car segment.

At this month’s international press launch, the indication was that the base B05 could land in Australia priced at around $36,000, though that figure is not confirmed and should not be treated as final. European pricing starts from €26,900, but that is not a straight guide to what we will pay here.

What matters more for now is how the car drives, because this was our first chance to sample the European/export-market tune that should be much closer to what Australia will receive… and the answer is: very well.

We drove the B05 on a mix of roads outside Frankfurt in Germany, including smooth country roads, tighter sections through villages, and those typical European cobblestone surfaces that can make a badly tuned car feel cheap very quickly, and the B05 did not feel cheap.