It's a strange world indeed where 1980s Toyota Corollas change hands for hefty four and even five-figure sums , but that is the world in which we live. Of course,. Known worldwide, they might be called Trueno, Levin, or Corolla GT, but all share a common moniker:Despite spells in rallying and touring car racing, it's the sport ofwhich has brought the rear-wheel drive, high-revving Corollas to global attention.The lightweight, simple, live-axle design is thefor sending the rear tyres on a different journey to those at the front. Whether immortalised by 'Drift King' Keiichi Tsuchiya or in the Initial D cartoon series, the Hachi-Roku ("Eight-Six") is the embodiment of what we love about cars -. It's for those reasons its spiritual successor, the GT86,It may not wear the nameplate, but the latest Hachi-Roku is cut from the same cloth. Power, speed and frivolous luxury take a back-seat in favour of balance and response. Naturally, a quarter-century of progress has brought with it some advancements. You get airbags. You get air conditioning. There's even some degree of noise insulation, and optional sat-navNo dog-eared 1985 A-Z required. It's a product of its time, yet a child of a different decade. Those who label it as slow, or replace the Prius tyres with something stickier, could be accused of missing the point.What we want to know isWould you want the past master,on your drive, or a car with the Hachi-Roku's spirit, dragged kicking and screaming into the 21st Century?