For the longest time, the M3->ke2366 and M5->ke2922 were the only two M cars->ke546 you could buy, but now the M badge has proliferated across the BMW->ke178 lineup. What was once the just the M3 has now spawned the M4.->ke4183 The M6->ke208 comes in both coupe->ke141 and four-door coupe flavors. Want a faster SUV->ke145 or crossover?->ke288 Look no further than the 2015 BMW X5 M and 2015 BMW X6 M. And that’s not even counting M Performance cars like the 2014 BMW M235i or the upcoming M2 sport coupe and M7->ke4402 fast full-size sedan.->ke142 I might need a new “M” key by the time I finish typing this.

For my money the M4 and M6 Coupe are probably the two most desirable M cars in the current range, and the two came together for this half-mile drag race->ke446 caught on camera by the Bay Area Racing YouTube channel. By the looks and sounds of the two, they’re far from stock. Both wear Vörsteiner body kits and wheels. I’m normally not a body-kit-kind-of-guy, but the kits for both cars land in good place on the understated/obnoxious continuum.

In stock form, the M4’s twin-turbo, 3.0-liter, straight-six engine puts down 425 horsepower and 406 pound-feet of torque, while the twin-turbo, 4.4-liter V-8 in the M6 produces 560 horsepower and 501 pound-feet of torque. We’re not sure how much power these two are making, but we imagine it’s a good bit more than that. Both drivers stomp the loud pedal after a rolling start, and get on with the job of making it to the other end of the half-mile stretch of runway as quickly as possible. Can the lighter M4 hold off the (presumably) more-powerful M6? Watch and find out.

2015 BMW M4

Read our full review here.

2016 BMW M6

Read our full review here.