Get used to it… nearly everything is electronically controlled anyway, and most manufacturers are moving to something like this.
The good news is the Kia/Genesis dial shifter is actually pretty well designed. Twist to the right for drive. Twist to the left for reverse. Push the button on the top for park. There is no confusion, you could use it with your eyes closed. It’s significantly more intuitive than dials on FCA products or Ford products.
Even the buttons on modern Hyundais are not bad. Familiarize yourself with it for two minutes and you’re set. Our
Palisade is my wife’s daily driver but every once in a while I will drive it briefly and I do not even think about shifting. I just push the buttons. Don’t even need to look. And I’m used to traditional shifters on my two cars that I actually drive normally.
Then again, I actually kind of liked the monostable electronic gearshift on my previous daily driver, a 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee Summit. So maybe I’m more open minded than most.
Those vehicles got recalled because idiots couldn’t figure out if they were in park or not when they got out of the car. But it really wasn’t a difficult shifter to understand. And again, something you could use without looking at after a very short familiarization.
Anyway, if you wholesale eliminate vehicles from your shopping list based on gearshift design, your list is going to get shorter and shorter and shorter… Either that, or you’ll just have to enjoy your Telluride forever.
Which is feasible, it’s an amazing vehicle!