There was a good mix of different vehicles. Some were European, many were Asian. Similar to what you see here.
Due to the proximity to China, I even saw a Chinese make or two. It was remarkably nice and comparable to a Hundai or KIA.
Quite a few jacked up and rodded SUV's. A few pickups. VW's, etc..
I even talked to one guy driving a Dodge Ram pick up. He was out to dinner at my hotel (which had a very good and popular restaurant) with his wife/girlfriend and spoke very good English. He seemed in his mid-30's and some sort of successful business type. I've got his email address and he says if I come back in the summer, he's got a wake boat for touring the local waterways or wake boarding on the Amur river.
I believe I saw a Chevy emblem as well. But American makes were generally scarce.
The only Subaru I noticed looked like an Outback. May have been the model you referenced. I'm not sure. It was on the other side of the parking lot.
I saw a couple of what looked like old Soviet models as well. They looked like antiques from a bygone era. But most were driving modern cars or SUV's.
The place was modern and the population well educated. Besides the language and minor cultural differences and of course the extreme weather, it had a remarkably familiar feel to it.
They even had a Harley Davidson cafe/bar/restaurant.
It's in the underground part of a building, downtown, just off the main street. The place was a riot. Everybody dresses like a cowboy or cowgirl, or a 1920's flapper. I asked for a menu and they asked me in broken English if I wanted 'the meat'. I was a little confused. I said 'what is the meat'. The guy says for 500 rubles, from 6pm to 3am we bring you all the meat and vegetables you can eat. It's the only thing on the menu. 500 rubles is less than $10.
I said, 'yeah, give me the meat'. And the servers kept stopping by my table with slabs of beef, chicken, pork, fresh vegetables and bread.. I sat through about 30 minutes of this and I was stuffed.

It was great.