The very first front-wheel-drive Mitsubishi production car was the Mirage subcompact, which first hit Japanese streets in 1978. We were introduced to this car when it appeared in North America as a 1979 model with Dodge Colt and Plymouth Champ badging, replacing the rear-wheel-drive Colts
For devoted fans of the Mirage, the 1989 through 1994 model years offered American car shoppers near-identical versions of that car sold via four different brands: the Mitsubishi Mirage, the Dodge Colt, the Plymouth Colt and the Eagle Summit. For 1995 and 1996, the Eagle Summit remained available in coupe, sedan and MPV form
For 1995-1996, the Mirage was available only as a two-door and in just two trim levels: S and LS. This car is the cheapest new Mitsubishi available in the United States for 1995, and one of the most affordable new cars overall: its MSRP was $9,799, or $20,483 in 2024 dollars. The essentially identical 1995 Eagle Summit DL coupe listed at $9,836 (presumably, the extra 37 bucks was for the prestige of the Eagle name).