That's been the inspiration, at least.
Last weekend, I had been driving my sisters XTerra, and I really enjoyed it. I liked being able to turn around in confined areas by simply running up the curb. I also like the idea that I can not worry about bashing the oil pan on a curb or something. Not to mention my desire to be able to tackle snow banks and everything without nary a worry.
So I've been looking online... and I think I want to lift it.
There are lots of kits out there. One by Scorpion and another by some other Aussie company.
Scorpion offers a few kits. One is a body lift, which is actually pretty ingenious. It includes spacers for the engine crossmember, transmission crossmember, driveshaft bearing, rear diff crossmember, and strut tops (and a few other misc. spacers). Who woulda thought, a body lift for a unibody.
So I was thinking of that. It'd allow me to clear larger tires, as well as provide some body-to-ground clearance.
They also offer some "lifting" springs. Giving an additional 30mm of lift (for a total of 80mm).
Scorpion also offers a gangster steel bumper and beefy cast aluminum skid-plate.

I think it looks pretty sweet, and functional!
Check out this cardomain I found: http://www.cardomain.com/ride/792800
He also did an EA82 tranny and diff swap so he'd have 4hi and 4lo. I don't really want to do that.
I'd love to do the body lift, because drivetrain specs are still stock. But I'd be concerned with the suspension lift because of driveshaft angles and such.
My other concern is gas mileage. Obviously, being higher up will be bad for gas mileage, and with the 4.44:1 final drive, it's a little crazy. Bigger tires may help but at the same time, bigger tires are heavier and would decrease gas mileage too.
A final concern is all of the other stuff I would have to do at the same time.
If I got the springs to do the suspension lift, I'd need new struts too (because the new springs would be so stiff, the stock struts COULDN'T last long). Tack on $600 for some AGX's. Then Group N tophats, and probably new brake lines. Then tires too. Then I would also be putting my axles in geopardy.
The Body lift is around $800.
The springs are $400 (but after all of that stuff, it'd be more like $1800).
I'd also want a skid plate and diff protector (skid plate from Scorpion is $379, and the OE rear diff protector is $50).
So there's my question. Body lift would be badass, but it would be mostly a visual difference than a mechanical advantage. The bonus is that everything drivetrain wise would remain stock. The down side, I'm not actually gaining THAT much ground clearance. Though I AM getting the floor boards and sills higher off the ground.
With the suspension lift, I'm curious about the tire choice as well. As the car sits, it has 225/50/16 and they are pretty close to the struts. With 225/75/16 (29") tires, they would surely rub. I'm not sure how the cardomain guy got it to work unless he used spacers? He used 215/85/15 Swampers. I can't find much in a 215/80/16.

I am not a hardcore off-roader. If I was, I would have gotten the Jeep instead of my first Legacy.
So what are you guys's thoughts?