Affordable? Hmmm. I'd say, from those I like (not just quick and cheap)
Pug 205 GTi 1.9 (my cousin owned one). I also really liked the later 306 GTI (better looking) and its little bro the 106GTi and their cheaper Rallye/XSi versions.
Nissan Almera mk1 2.0 GTi (the dealership chap who sold me my Micra owned one - very nice indeed)
VW Golf mkII GTi - the hot hatch of choice in the 1980s until the Pug arrived
Honda Civic (2001 - 05) Type R - I was that close to buying one instead of my Mazda3 1.6 petrol because they only cost about £17k or so back in 2006 (shows how much car prices have risen since). The last value-for money hot hatch in my opinion. Still see a load still going today, albeit most have been modded.
Renault Clio 16V/Williams (a former colleage had the former and it very much reminded me of my cousin's Pug 205 GTi - both pocket rockets).
Aspirational car (my 1980s fave): The Audi Quattro, especially the later ones with the smoked light clusters. Sweet. Even better than a Cossie.
A former colleague owned one of those Mondeos from the late 2000s in that very sporty Ford blue (it could've had a white stripe too) colour. Very nice.
A shame that the time of affordable new perfromance cars (especially those where the suspension isn't as hard as a rock and not shod on tyres so low profile you can bear see them side on) has now passed. You'll be lucky to find anything (at least in the UK*) for under £30k these days.
* Pandemic price rises aside, there are still some bargain performance cars out there, unfortunately not in Euorpe, mainly in the US, presumably because the cost of living is cheaper. Even factoring in the exchange rate, equivalent cars are still quite a bit cheaper than those on sale in Europe and many other Western countries.
For example, you can pick up a new Mazda3 2.5T Auto range-topper (not even sold over here) for the same or less than the 2.0 Skactiv-X GT Sport. I'm sure it's a similar situation for other makes/models as well.
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