New video comin' out soon.

I'm torn between two titles: I'm discussing a problem which is made obvious by electric cars, and I spend a lot of time discussing the specifics of the problem. Most of the video's runtime is spent dealing with electric cars and one-pedal driving.

However, the problem affects pretty much all new cars these days - electric or not.

Should I stick with "Electric cars prove..." in the title for the clicks, or is it better to go with "New cars prove..." ?

"Electric"
35.1%
"New"
64.9%
Poll ended at .
I've edited the question - I supposed there's no point in being spoily since I'll probably hit publish within the hour, but understand that more than anything I need people to click on the video and not just for selfish reasons - my ultimate goal is for this to lead to somebody hopefully writing a regulation, and I need maximum awareness for that to occur.
OK, I've settled on electric. Linky-dink incoming!
Well, it worked...

@TechConnectify

Found in my 2022 Ioniq 5 Software version NEEV.USA.S5W_M.V009.001.230203 that the brake lights worked fine in ipedal when just letting off @ 30mph. Here's the video of my testing.

You may have an issue with your specific i5, feel free to DM me and we can see if we can figure out what's going on with your particular car.

https://youtu.be/876ZKoorQDQ

Refuting @TechnologyConnections Ioniq 5 Brake Light Test

YouTube
@Brikloss if you entirely release the pedal, yes the brake lights come on. I never said they never work, but you haven't shown your footwork here and that sure looks like a rapid stop