Funny hearing the pros on the RWD vs FWD, I have debated that here before. All I know is around here every year we get a big influx of people from California with their modern RWD luxury cars. The best traction control, the best snow tires, perfect 50/50 weight distribution, and by the 2nd winter every single one of them will be sold for a FWD or AWD. I grew up on RWD, and I drive a RWD mail truck every day in every condition, still FWD would be better in the snow every time, and AWD vastly superior to that. We aren't talking high speed lap times, just getting out of your driveway and over the 2 foot tall berm the plow left and on to work. Or in my case getting through the fresh snow before the plows have even been out. Yeah the RWD mail trucks do it, but they only do it with full chains added even in just a skiff of snow, or even still when all the snow has been packed down solid. There is just something good in the snow about wheels pulling the mass rather than pushing the mass. Maybe the way they dig, or that you can saw them side to side to find better traction. RWD vs AWD is just a no brainer in winter climates. This video shows well what I'm talking about around the 4 min mark when they try and start on a hill. Dedicated snow tires, modern traction control, and the truck is just stuck on loose snow with a slight hill, a common road condition I experience in western Montana.