No, Chevy Didn't Leak The C9 Corvette, But What Actually Happened Is Way CoolerThe internet decided this week that General Motors had slipped up and leaked the next Corvette. A mysterious sports car flashed across a screen in a GM video, screenshots flew, and suddenly everyone was calling it the C9. It's a great story. It's also wrong, and the truth behind that blurry shot is honestly more interesting than the rumor that ran with it.Here's how the whole thing got started. GM CEO Mary Barra sat for a video interview that aired on NBC News, and the subject was how artificial intelligence is reshaping the way cars get designed. Barra talked about how a process that used to take years has been compressed down to minutes. While she was making that point, the video cut to shots of an employee's computer screen, and on that screen was a sleek sports car. That was all it took. People grabbed the frames, passed them around, and decided they were looking at the C9 Corvette that GM is expected to launch around 2028 or 2029.The problem is that the timeline makes no sense, and the car in the shot isn't even a secret. Start with the math on Corvette generations. GM revealed the mid-engine C8 in July 2019 and started building it at the Bowling Green Assembly Plant in February 2020, with the first cars reaching buyers that summer. That was six years ago. Since the modern era kicked off with the C4, a Corvette generation usually runs somewhere between seven and nine years, and the longest-lived of them all, the C3, stuck around for 14. By that measure the C8 still has real life left in it, and the C9 is a couple of years out at minimum.AdvertisementAdvertisementThat's where the rumor really falls apart. GM just rolled out the Grand Sport and the Grand Sport X, the latter built to take over for the E-Ray. No automaker drops fresh variants like that and then immediately starts teasing the design of the entire next generation. It would step on its own product launches. The C8 is inching toward the end of its run, sure, but that end hasn't arrived, and GM has no reason to get ahead of it.So what was actually on that screen? Not the C9. What people saw was the Corvette CX Concept, a car that made its public debut at Monterey Car Week back in August 2025. It isn't hidden, it isn't a leak, and it has been out in the open for months. The CX is a radical electric hypercar design study, the kind of thing GM builds to flex its imagination rather than its assembly line.And as a piece of hardware, the CX is wild. It wears a jet-inspired canopy and runs active aero tech, and it puts a motor at each of the four wheels for more than 2,000 horsepower sent to all four corners. To put that in perspective, the most powerful production Corvette you can actually buy, the ZR1X hypercar, makes 1,250 horsepower from a 5.5-liter twin-turbocharged LT7 V8 paired with an electric motor. The concept nearly doubles it. There's a 90-kWh lithium-ion battery pack on board, and while GM hasn't said a word about range, you can do the math on what a quad-motor setup making that kind of power does to efficiency. Don't expect big numbers there.The CX does point at where Corvette design is heading, and that's probably part of why people mistook it for the next production car. But previewing a design language is not the same as previewing a product. This thing isn't built for a dealership. The closest most people will get to driving one is virtually, inside Gran Turismo 7.AdvertisementAdvertisementThat detail matters for anyone getting excited about the real next-gen car, because the actual C9 is further out than the hype suggests. It won't show up before 2029, and when it does, it arrives as a 2030 model year. The next Corvette is expected to keep the mid-engine layout while picking up new technology and more electrification, and nobody should be shocked if a fully electric variant joins the lineup around the mid-cycle refresh, projected for somewhere near 2034 if the plan holds.So the leak that wasn't a leak comes down to this. A concept car that has been public since last summer got mistaken for a secret, and a six-year-old Corvette got written off years before its time. The hype machine moved faster than the facts, which is what it almost always does. The good news for enthusiasts is that the next real Corvette is still coming, it's still mid-engine, and the wild electric concept floating around the internet is a preview of the imagination behind it, not the badge on the back of the next one.SourceJoin our Newsletter, follow our Instagram page, and connect with us on Facebook.