Mission 9/10
Originality 7/10
Intelligence 9/10
Class 7/10
Overall 9/10
Brandon has approached Operation Golden Bonk with the calm, methodical energy of a man who has actually thought this through — which is either very impressive or deeply concerning for someone named Brandon. The F-TYPE V8 for Phase 1 is genuinely excellent. Supercharged, snarling, looks like it costs more than it does, and that startup sound will make valets at Crown Casino briefly question their life choices in the best possible way. It's not a brand new Bentley, but it's 2025 and James Bonk is underfunded — this is the move. Full marks for reading the room on a budget. The only mild critique: $68k is doing some heavy lifting on this roster, so the remaining two phases had better pull their weight. Spoiler: they do.
The Evo X for the chase is the kind of pick that makes you go 'oh he actually knows what he's doing.' It looks like a sales rep's company car and goes like a homesick missile. AWD rally DNA, paddle shifts, and the absolute last thing anyone on Melbourne's tram-riddled grid is going to clock as a threat until it's already three blocks ahead of them. Kev from the Shed would weep with pride. And then the Prado GXL diesel for the safehouse run is so boringly correct it almost hurts — diesel engine, genuine 4x4 capability, Toyota reliability that borders on supernatural, and enough range to reach regional Victoria without even glancing at a servo. Brandon didn't try to be clever here. He just picked the right car. Respect.
Total spend of $144,689 leaves $5,311 on the table, which is tidy but not perfect — that's roughly a Bunnings gift card for Kev and a tank of diesel left unspent. The garage logic is sound across all three phases, the budget allocation is considered, and crucially, none of these cars are going to leave James Bonk stranded on a dirt road outside Benalla with a briefcase full of F1 secrets. The mission has a genuine shot at success. Brandon played this like a professional, which ironically makes him the most suspicious person in the room.
Brandon picked the right car for every phase, spent the money sensibly, and the only thing wrong with his garage is that it makes everyone else look like they're trying too hard.
Mission 8/10
Originality 6/10
Intelligence 8/10
Class 7/10
Overall 8/10
Amila has walked into Operation Golden Bonk like someone who actually read the brief, which is already more than we expected. The 2015 Mercedes S400 in black for the Crown Casino arrival? Genuinely solid. That long-wheelbase S-Class rolls up like old money — the valet doesn't just open your door, he questions his life choices and wonders if he should be carrying your briefcase. At $50k it's a bargain flex, and leaving budget for the later phases shows a brain that's actually ticking. Well played, Agent Amila. Q Branch — sorry, Kev — would approve.
Textbook mission planning with zero dollars wasted and zero phases botched — Amila is the agent who actually survives to the sequel.
Mission 4/10
Originality 6/10
Intelligence 5/10
Class 7/10
Overall 5/10
Then we get to Phase 2. Cam.Ali, with the full confidence of a man who has watched Initial D once, sends James Bonk into a Melbourne city pursuit in a Mazda MX-5. Now look — the power-to-weight argument is technically defensible, and yes, it will thread corners like a caffeinated go-kart. But here's the thing: you've just stepped out of an M5 at Crown Casino, looking like a high roller, and now you're folding yourself into a two-seat hairdryer with a soft top. The cover is blown. The bad guys aren't confused — they're laughing. Also, the MX-5 makes 135kW, which is fine, until the pursuit vehicle is anything built after 2015. The real problem though? Cam.Ali has spent $170,468 — that's $20,468 over the hard cap. The mission didn't fail on a dirt road. It failed at the checkout. MI6 didn't disavow him. Accounting did.
Two excellent picks and one adorable miscalculation later, Cam.Ali blew the budget, blew the cover, and sent James Bonk into a car chase in a hairdresser's convertible — mission: mostly vibes.
Mission 9/10
Originality 6/10
Intelligence 9/10
Class 8/10
Overall 8/10
Mike Wong has walked into Operation Golden Bonk like a man who actually read the briefing. Twice. The 2006 Aston Martin V8 Vantage for the arrival is, frankly, the correct answer and anyone who argues otherwise can go park their Camry at Crown and watch what happens. It has the badge, the silhouette, the growl, and the quiet menace of a man who definitely has a gun but won't tell you where. The valet will absolutely treat you like someone. Whether that someone is a mid-tier oligarch or a very well-dressed accountant is unclear, but either way the mission objective is ticked. The Audi S4 for the chase is genuinely intelligent — fast enough to stay in the game, boring enough to avoid looking like a threat, and quattro AWD to keep you alive through Flinders Street at 2am when the tram tracks are wet and your life is a liability. It's the espionage equivalent of a suppressed pistol: effective, discreet, no drama. And the Prado? Mate, the Prado is so right it's almost unfair. One owner, low kilometres for its age, long-range tank, dual-range 4WD, and the mechanical immortality of a machine that Toyota apparently built by accident while trying to make a tank. Kev from the Shed wouldn't even need to touch it. He could just wave his Ryobi drill at it for moral support.
Textbook execution, near-perfect budget discipline, and the one bloke in the room who actually understood the assignment — Mike Wong is dangerously close to getting a commendation from Kev.
Mission 9/10
Originality 7/10
Intelligence 8/10
Class 8/10
Overall 8/10
Jacky rolled up to Crown Casino in a 2000 Bentley Arnage — a car so heavy it has its own gravitational field and a fuel consumption figure that reads like a mild war crime. But you know what? It absolutely works. The valet WILL treat you like someone. Specifically, someone who inherited money and questionable judgment, which is exactly the energy James Bonk needs. It's not subtle, it's not modern, but it radiates the kind of authority that says 'I have a briefcase full of secrets and a drinking problem.' For Phase 2, the black Porsche Cayman S 987 is a legitimately brilliant call — mid-engine balance, surgical cornering, and in black it looks like a bad decision that went to finishing school. Kev from the Shed would weep with pride. No notes. That's a proper chase car and Jacky clearly knows it.
Phase 3 lands on the 2007 Prado GXL, which is the vehicular equivalent of putting on sensible shoes at the end of a big night. After a Bentley and a Porsche, nobody expected this, and yet here we are — reliable, capable, 3 hours to a dirt-road safehouse and this thing won't even blink. Jacky even admitted they wanted a Jimny, which tells you everything about Jacky's soul, but had the discipline to choose correctly. The Prado is boring in the best possible way. The F1 documents will arrive dry and intact. Total spend of $147,277 leaves $2,723 unspent — close enough to the cap to show genuine planning without being reckless. Honestly, this is a tightly constructed mission loadout. The Bentley is the wildcard that somehow fits, the Cayman is the class act, and the Prado is the professional finisher.
A Bentley, a Porsche, and a Prado walk into a mission briefing — and somehow Jacky made all three work, spent the budget like an adult, and gave James Bonk an actual fighting chance.