Before the Probe, I had a 1985 1/2 Ford Escort. That's not a typo. They actually had a half-year model that was the 1985 body with 1986 engine. On a road trip a buddy got a speeding ticket while I was very sick and couldn't drive, doing 93 mph. Which is as fast as the car could go (4th gear, pedal to the floor), but we never knew exactly until it was clocked by radar because the speedo stopped at 85 mph.
After the Probe, I inherited my grandmother's 1985 Chrysler Lebaron Turbo, in light blue with dark blue faux velvet interior. She had lost her license as she was starting to get "confused" at her age by then and failed her driving test multiple times. I would have rather kept the Probe but my parents wanted to sell whichever one would get more money, and that was the Probe.
The 85-mph speedo!
Aaaaaggggghhhhhhhh!!!The idea was that speeders and other scofflaws would want to see how fast their car would go, and the 85-mph speedo would make them lose interest in going any faster than that.
My first car was like this.

Only mine had none of the luxury trim that that one has. Mine had hubcaps that covered up the center of the pale-yellow-painted steel wheels, untinted glass, no radio, a Sears A/C mounted on the tunnel, a 170 c.i.d. straight-six with 2-speed Ford-o-matic tranny. It was 6 years old and was already worn out when I got it. lasted about 8 months, coming to grief northbound on some N-S street south of Rosemont, IL. I ran over a paper sack that must have been filled with either bricks or angle-iron.
My second car was like this, only silver.

I loved it, but decided after my freshman year at OU that I needed something bigger, so I got something like this.

Again, mine didn't have the upscale trim package that this one does. Mine didn't have the chrome rocker-panel covers or the styled steel wheels shown here. Maybe this one has the GT package. Mine was maroon instead of red. 289 4-barrel Autolite carb with C-4 auto trans. Not nearly as much fun to drive as the Datsun had been.
And, yes, the simulated scoops in front of the rear wheel openings were fake. Fake, fake, fake.