How Scout Motors Plans to Deliver Both Modern Tech and Digital Detox—Simultaneously
At CES 2025, Scout previewed the Community UX infotainment system for its Terra pickup truck and Traveler SUV.Can Scout Motors get right what so many experienced automakers keep getting wrong? The reborn American off-road brand thinks it can by taking a more balanced approach to touchscreens, connectivity, and in-vehicle technology in the Scout Terra pickup and the Scout Traveler SUV.
At CES 2025, Dré Nitze-Nelson, director of UX and UI at Scout, gave MotorTrend a preview of the infotainment system called Community UX that will ultimately end up in the Terra and Traveler. Scout’s EV and range-extended electric trucks won’t go into production until 2027 and are still under development, so don’t be surprised if some of the details discussed here change before the final versions arrive. Based on what we’ve seen, though, we’re optimistic that Scout is moving in the right direction.
The team behind Scout’s Community UX appears to understand what often seems blindingly obvious to, well, anyone who has been in a modern car: Today’s buyers want their trucks to do the basics—stream music and videos, sniff out the nearest taco joint, make a phone call, and send a text message—with the same speed and ease of a cell phone. At the same time, they don’t want the tech in their vehicles to dominate the driving experience. The act of driving should be a refuge from a world filled with screens that demand constant attention. That’s our philosophy, at least, and it appears that the people behind Scout have similar beliefs.
Behold: Physical Knobs and Buttons!
As we saw during the debut of the Terra pickup and the Traveler SUV, Scout plans to buck the buttonless trend started by Tesla and imitated by Rivian and Lucid that packs nearly every control into a touchscreen. In the Scouts, you adjust the mirror and steering wheel with dedicated knobs and you flick a lever to the left of the steering wheel to signal a turn. There’s a quartet of auxiliary switches by the driver’s left knee and a set of toggles for the locking differentials and related off-road features on the headliner.
Both Scout models also feature a row of dedicated physical climate controls under the 16.2-inch touchscreen. Those controls will allow drivers to adjust the temperature, fan speed, and air distribution without taking their eyes off the road even as they’re designed to be an extension of the screen rather than an entirely separate system. Notice, for example, how the temperature dials sit directly below the temperature readouts shown on the touchscreen. The switches just inboard of those dials change whether air blows at your feet, your torso, or the windshield. In the prototype, you can toggle them to cycle through the various options, but the first tap also summons an on-screen pop-up (right above the switch again) that allows you to directly select which vents are open.
It’s clear that Scout has been thinking hard about the user experience. The volume knob mounted on the screen’s right edge is practically out of reach for the driver because it’s intended to be used by the passenger. The driver adjusts the volume using a roller on the steering wheel, one of a handful of tactile controls dedicated to a single function. That alone feels like a novel and refreshing idea in the age of multifunction capacitive steering-wheel controls with no labels.






