Engwe Mapfour N1 Pro e-bike review: the new ‘premium’

Europe has an electric bike problem. Direct-to-consumer e-bikes from inexpensive Chinese brands like Engwe and countless others can be easily purchased online despite openly flouting EU restrictions. They feature throttles and powerful motors that can be easily unlocked to far exceed the 25km/h (16mph) legal speed limit a no pedaling required.
Here in Amsterdam, cheap Super73-knockoffs ridden at almost twice the legal speed have made the cityas renowned bicycle lanes increasingly chaotic and dangerous. Across the Netherlands, over 10,000 of these electric afat bikesa were seized in 2024.
Engweas new Mapfour lineup is the companyas attempt at going legit by expanding from souped-up electric fat bikes and foldables into apremium commutera e-bikes. And because theyare the first e-bikes that Engwe has designed exclusively for European roads, the company swears they canat be unlocked for more speed.
Iave been riding the new Mapfour N1 Pro model for the last few weeks. It lists for a1,899 (almost $2,000), or a1,799 during the initial launch a a price that brings heightened expectations.
The N1 Pro is slathered in premium capabilities like GPS/GSM tracki …