I never understood why anyone would want to run 87 octane in a car designed to run best on 93.
Assume the difference in price averages $1.00 a gallon and the car gets 20 miles per gallon and is driven 12,000 miles a year. That is 600 gallons per year, and using premium costs $600 a year more than regular. $600 a year is peanuts compared to the total annual cost of ownership, including insurance, depreciation, scheduled maintenance, and wear items such as brakes and tires.
If you desire a car with some level of performance, would you sacrifice some performance and go cheap on the brakes, tires or motor oil?
I guess when you are standing at the gas pump and looking at the prices, there is a temptation to go cheap?
If you want to buy and pay for 87 octane fuel, you should buy cars that the manufacturer recommends regular. If you buy a car that is designed to run best on premium, only use regular if premium is unavailable.