So you’re sitting on the couch, aimlessly scrolling, wondering if you’re ever going to use the deep and possibly concerning amount of automotive trivia clogging your brain. Enter: moreorless.io/game/which-car-was-built-more — the Wordle of vehicle production stats, but way more judgmental if you mix up your German sedans.
This little browser game has a simple premise: two cars pop up, and you guess which one was produced in greater volume. That’s it. No ads, no logins, no NFTs—just raw, click-happy shame when you realize you thought the PT Cruiser outsold the Miata. (Spoiler: It didn’t. But also, it kinda did depending on who you ask. The Miata had fewer midlife crises per unit, though.)
And yes, it includes the car—the one that basically invented mass production as we know it: the Ford Model T.
Did you know the Model T was produced in 15,000,000 units between 1908 and 1927? Fifteen. Million. That’s more than the population of Pennsylvania, and probably more than the number of humans who can successfully double-clutch.
The game is a slick little dopamine machine for anyone who can name 50 trims of the Accord without blinking, or just wants to feel smug about knowing the Toyota Corolla is the McDonald’s of car manufacturing (over 50 million served!). You’ll see some wild comparisons—like how many Lamborghinis it takes to match the production run of a humble Nissan Micra. Or how your favorite enthusiast car got absolutely smoked in sales by something you’d rather get tetanus than drive.
It’s also surprisingly addictive. One minute you’re guessing whether the VW Beetle sold more than the Golf (it did, by a margin so large it should be illegal), and the next thing you know, your coffee’s cold and you’ve accidentally joined a Reddit thread arguing about whether the Prius counts as iconic. (It does. Deal with it.)
So whether you’re an old-school car nerd, a spreadsheet junkie, or just someone who likes to be right, give it a go. You might learn something. Like how few Dodge Vipers exist compared to literally any Toyota.



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