Not according to their website:
tesla.com said:
Our most affordable car yet, Model 3 achieves 215 miles of range per charge while starting at only $35,000 before incentives.
The uncertainty with the Model 3 is if it will qualify for the full Federal EV incentive, as Tesla is closing in on the 200,000 vehicle threshold. The Model 3 may only qualify for half or 1/4 of the $7,500 FTC. Going off of the last price reports, a Bolt is $37,500, and the Model 3 is $35,000. As far as I know, only the Roadster missed its expected price point, but that price jump saved the company.
We now know that Supercharging will be extra, and many suspected before that it would be (DCQC on the Bolt will also be optional). Same for Autopilot. The hardware will be present in every car, but enabling the convenience features will cost extra, just like it does for the S and X now. The safety features (crash avoidance/emergency braking) will be standard. However, because of both the compatibility of Supercharging and having access to CHAdeMO stations with the already available adapter, the Model 3 is ahead right now in charging infrastructure. CCS is starting to catch up, though.
"Vaporware" suggests that a working prototype doesn't even exist. This isn't true, as there are three known prototypes (the three at the reveal, two of which offered test rides afterwards). The red one is parked out at the Gigafactory. There were also pictures floating around of a black Model 3, so this could mean at least 4 cars.
Even though this may put a hurt on Tesla's sales of the 3, one advantage of still being a year out is that they can step back and see what their competition brings and have the chance to top all of them before being fully committed to their production specs. By then, the S and X could gain another 5 kWh of energy storage, which would help the 3 in the range department as well.
Back on topic, amazing that the Bolt blew away the range predictions, and I look forward to test driving one soon.