I had two VW diesels that I took past 400,000 km, and the first one was in a model range with a big black mark in the Consumer Reports ratings.
Some of that big black mark was due to 1990s-era VW automatic transmissions. Mine was manual.
Some of that big black mark was due to sunroof drains becoming blocked and causing water to get into places that it shouldn't be. Mine didn't have a sunroof.
Some of that big black mark was due to various issues with the early VW VR6 petrol engines, which this model was a recipient of. Mine had the 1.9 litre 4 cylinder diesel engine, and it was bulletproof. And changing the timing belt was a reasonable do-it-yourself job, which I did myself a few times.
Some of that big black mark was due to certain electrical and electronic issues, and I will grant that the power supply for the instrument cluster was a weak point. Someone didn't do their cold-weather weak-battery validation well enough.
I sold that car with 462,000 km on it. Original clutch (although it was due), original transmission, original engine still running well, everything still worked. It needed to be taken off the road for a month to sort out various suspension-and-steering issues, and the paint needed attention to delay the onset of rust (it still looked good but you could tell that it needed attention), and as far as I know, the VW spare-time-mechanic who bought it from me, did just that and kept on driving. I saw it in a parking lot in a town near where I sold it some years later, and it still looked good.
It may have had the feared big black mark in Consumer Reports ... but my example was a good car.