Yeah, I feel the same. The dealers all around me have their 4BW Track Editions and I haven't seen one sell yet. I tend to be a price/performance type of buyer. If you are coming from Camaro or even the C7 Corvette world and the associated pricing I find it hard to justify spending the money. I feel like those highly optioned 4BWs and Track Editions are going to experience huge depreciation since they are not highly sought after as the 5BW and at the end of the day there are no mechanical or performance improvements made to the vehicle.
To me the 4BW is really a 4 door Camaro with a twin turbo V6. I just don't see why a 4BW has to cost so much more than a Camaro 2SS with 1LE package at $52k. Even my 2021 ZL1 was $67k. MSRP, which is still less than most 4BWs.
The Camaros include Recaros, HUD, E-Diff, Mag-ride, 6 piston Brembos, 20" forged wheels with track tires, dual mode exhaust, Tremec TR6060, and you get a V8 option. I think Cadillac would do better if they had bundled packages instead of nickel and diming for all the options. The base price is reasonable for a high performance sports sedan but once you start ticking the boxes it gets expensive real quick. For example, HUD, $725, PDR $1600, you want the same wheels painted black, $600, painted bronze, $1500. You want your car any color other than black or white, $625, you want the same brake calipers painted red, blue or bronze, $600, red seat belts, $400, mid-tier sport bucket seats, $3k, leather seats, $5500, automatic transmission $3175 with mandatory packages. Then if you want the car to look as cool as it does in all the pictures you need to spend over $10k on carbon fiber packages. I get that is this a fairly low volume vehicle targeted at a shrinking demographic but still seems excessive.
What I appreciate most about the 4BW is that is strikes a good balance of performance and practicality and I can row my own gears. It ticks a lot of boxes but once it goes north of $70k I think the value proposition is lost. Just my opinion, no offense to anyone.