I'm not sure that I find driving much fun at all any more, though that's down to many years of commuting, and probably in part to where I live, in the populous south-east of England. I did a couple of trips last year to Cumbria and North Yorkshire, and it was certainly a pleasant experience not to be sharing the roads with quite so many other motorists.
But I have to agree about advances in engine technology. Until a few years ago I had a 1973 Triumph GT6. It had a 2-litre 6-cylinder twin carburettor engine, which in its day, when you could still get 100 octane petrol, produced a maximum power of 98 bhp (99 PS). It got along pretty well, thanks to a combination of fairly low weight and lowish gearing, though I have to agree with Allan that even in such a relatively modern car, it could be a real pain to drive if you were not in the mood for it.
By the time I sold it, roughly the same power output was available from the 1.4-litre engine in the Toyota I was driving at the time, and combined with secure handling and much better brakes, I doubt it could have been outrun by the GT6 in many conditions.
Now a few years on, my partner's Ford Fiesta has similar power output (100 PS), but from a 999-cc 3-cylinder turbocharged petrol engine, and that's not all the unit is capable of, as there is also a 125-PS version of the same engine.
Maximum power isn't everything, of course, and low-speed torque is much more important for everyday driving. Here the differences are even more telling. The 2-litre Triumph engine produced 108 lb.ft (146 Nm) at 3000 rpm, while the little 1-litre Ford unit produces 170 Nm from 1400 rpm upwards.
Things certainly move on.