The number that matters is 12,000 yuan, roughly $1,770, for a hands-off ADAS stack that includes more than a dozen cameras, lidar and radar. That is below the bill-of-materials most Western Tier 1s quote just for an automotive lidar unit. BYD is pricing God's Eye like a trim option, not a software upgrade, and using vertical integration (in-house silicon, sensors, batteries) to make the math work. For any operator pricing an L2+ or hands-off stack for the Chinese market, this resets the ceiling.
The liability pledge is the more interesting signal. Tesla, Mercedes (Drive Pilot) and a handful of Chinese OEMs have flirted with assuming costs during activation, but BYD doing it across a mass-market lineup turns ADAS from a feature into an insurance product. Watch whether BYD self-insures the exposure or wraps it with Ping An or PICC; that contract will tell you what BYD's internal disengagement and crash-rate numbers actually look like. The absence of a commercialization date is the hedge: Wang is setting the market's price expectations now and giving the regulators and underwriters time to catch up.