Goodbye to the Ford MiniZilla on 2027s?

It’s a strange feeling when you know your brand new truck has a discontinued engine already. Not because the engine was bad, but because it was seen duplicative in mind of the accountants. Hearing that Ford is pulling the plug on the 6.8L “Minizilla” in 2027 makes my 2026 Super Duty feel like a bit of a relic before its time, though I’d argue for many thrifty customers like myself, the Minizilla makes more sense.

The Minizilla was sold as the budget-friendly alternative to the 7.3L Godzilla for base trim trucks, but had many benefits beyond a $1,500 cheaper price. By simply shortening the stroke of its big brother, Ford created a snappier, higher-revving engine with fewer pumping losses. For those of us not trying to move a mountain every day, it was the “Goldilocks” optionβ€”fuel savings enough to keep the gas bill sane during these high-price spikes, but punchy enough to make a base-trim truck feel light on its feet.

I’m not losing sleep over maintenance; the fact that it shares a DNA pool with the Godzilla means parts will be sitting on shelves for decades. But from a perspective of many fleet operators who wanted something less expensive it feels like a missed step. In a world where every cent per mile counts, having a less thirsty, lighter-duty option for the everyday grind just makes sense.

I suppose I can’t blame Ford for wanting to streamline the assembly lineβ€”producing two engines that are nearly identical is a hard sell for the accountants. But sometimes, in my mind the “smaller” option is actually the better one.

Feature 6.8L “MiniZilla” V87.3L “Godzilla” V8
Horsepower405 hp @ 5,000 rpm430 hp @ 5,500 rpm
Torque445 lb-ft @ 4,000 rpm485 lb-ft @ 4,000 rpm
Recommended Octane87 Octane87 Octane
Fuel Economy (Empty)~13–16 MPG (est.)~12–15 MPG (est.)
Fuel Economy (Towing)~10–11 MPG~8–10 MPG
Max Towing CapacityUp to 18,900 lbsUp to 23,400 lbs
TransmissionTorqShift-G 10-speed (10R100)TorqShift 10-speed (10R140)

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