Despite the slight uplift in power (torque is unchanged at 310lb ft), the 'EA888' turbocharged 2.0-litre feels much as it did before. Almost lag-free, it doles out satisfyingly elastic performance as it pulls hard and smoothly from idle all the way through to the 6800rpm cut-out. Combined with the four-wheel drive, it makes the Golf a clinically efficient point-to-point machine with the sort of easily accessible pace that delivers slingshot corner exits and stress-free overtaking.
Outright urge is as strong as you'd expect, with VW claiming 4.6sec for the 0-62mph sprint and a top speed pegged at an electronically limited 155mph. Our Black Edition test car also featured the R Performance Package (usually a £1950 option on the standard version), which raises the top speed to 168mph – and adds a ‘Drift’ mode, natch.
Also available is a lightweight and wallet-crunchingly expensive (£3315) Akrapovic exhaust that promises to give the Golf greater voice, especially if you press and hold the start button for at least a second and a half without touching the brake pedal to initiate a theatrical flare of revs to 2500rpm once the engine churns into life. One for those neighbours you can’t abide, perhaps…
Even so, when fired up in this manner, the Golf still lacks the instant aural drama of the old Audi RS3, or even the admittedly much pricier Mercedes-AMG A45. There’s a greater baritone timbre than before, but the R remains a fast hatch that would rather let others play the peacocking game.