I don't disagree with the negative comments on the EV pickups in general, but the Bezos version seems to be going for the portion of the market that has been forgotten. The person that wants the small, no frills, inexpensive transportation. Think the VW Bug of the EV world. When you need an 18 wheeler, get an 18 wheeler. When you need a 1 ton dually, get it. When you want a pickup, that rides like a car, get a half ton. When you want something small and inexpensive to drive around town and occasionally haul stuff that won't fit in a car, get a Ford Maverick or Ranger. Or maybe a Bezos EV.
I think the issue with this idea is that for 'people who have a pick up but don't need a pick up' (i.e 99% of urban buyers), the truck is a status symbol.
It's the Porsche for those who enjoy rural cosplay, effectively.
As an urbanite who commutes into downtown to work, I see a lot of these people. I work with plenty of them.
I know their lifestyles, I know precisely how much they need a truck. Their choice to be truck owners is as much rooted in practicality, functionality or cost as my choice to commute to work in my Hellcat.
These people aren't looking for 'functional, practical, small, inexpensive, or unobtrusive'. If they were, they'd buy a Camry. The 'cheap, no frills' vehicle their lifestyle actually requires. They're looking for a status symbol and a toy.
The Cybertruck actually met their needs quite well, and is imo a rather excellently positioned vehicle.
Totally useless as a truck, a fairly trash tier vehicle overall, but certainly a head turner and a statement piece for those who want to do the 'cool, manly, tough, independent' truck lifestyle signalling, but also fancy some 'green' credentials to virtue signal with. Plus of course it's reassuringly expensive so your neighbors know things are going well, and it's recognizable enough to scratch that conspicuous consumption itch.
This though, seems to be an excellent vehicle for people who need to do 'truck things'.
That's no bad thing, but it's an EV, so 95% of people who actually do 'truck things' won't buy it.
As for the the other 80%+ of truck drivers? Well, they never, ever do truck things in the first place and will hate that it's designed to do a job, not be a statement piece.