Since 2024 is ending and we have just welcomed September, it’s time for Atlas Honda to make strides regarding the new colors and stickers. Don’t get it? Well, the company is anticipated to launch the new Honda CG125 2025 in September 2024.

Picasso Meets Motorbikes

The breathtaking new features and specifications could lift the game to a new level where international two-wheeler brands would love to flock to Pakistan, eager to learn the secret art of designing and how to play just with stickers and random colors. It’s like Picasso meets motorbikes but… only with the coloring book.

Moreover, they could also learn marketing gimmicks or borrow some courage to call a new sticker ‘a new model’ with matchless zeal and zest. You would be more surprised to know that it only takes some minutes to produce a new model since it is just limited to picking the trending colors. Don’t believe us? Slap those stickers on your decade-old CG125, and voilà! You now possess the latest model in all its glory.

Life Is About ‘Colors’

But hold on! Atlas Honda isn’t just selling motorcycles; they’re selling emotions. Because, clearly, the only competition that matters are who can add the most colors to their bike. So, when they tell you it’s a new model, don’t you dare call it “just a cosmetic change.” Think of it as adding colors to your life. Because, at the end of the day, what’s a new year without a new sticker?

New CD 70 2025

Last month, the company revealed new model of the most prominent CD70, aka, “Awami Sawari”. And again, it was all about the new design and colors aesthetics.

Atlas Honda finally updated the rear brake hub on the all-new 2025 CD70, changing it from chrome to silver paint. Can you believe that it take years of research and development. However, the brakes themselves remain unchanged – they are still the same drum brakes that perform poorly in emergency braking situations.

For years, riders have eagerly anticipated more than just surface-level tweaks to their rides. Honda’s upcoming offering will be perceived as the iteration of past versions. The new model limited to just visual enhancements may bring a sense of excitement but it also prompts questions about the necessity for substantial innovation in future models.