Blue Demon Car Overview
Blue Demon Car was one of those simple, single-screen games you'd find in the late 2000s, a time when Flash games were a common way to pass a few minutes. It didn't have a story or complex levels. The premise was straightforward: you had a car, and you could change its appearance. I don't recall a specific developer's name being attached to it, which was typical for many smaller Flash titles. The game just existed, a digital toy among thousands.
You control nothing but a cursor. The entire game is about using your mouse to click on different parts of the car's blueprint. Each click applies a new part or a paint color, transforming the vehicle piece by piece. You swap out rims, add spoilers, and change the body color. The objective is simply to customize the car to your liking, with no score or timer. The mechanics are purely about selection and visual assembly; you try combinations until you're satisfied with the look. The pacing is entirely your own, and there is no difficulty to speak of. It feels like fiddling with a set of digital stickers, a quiet and undemanding exercise in personal preference.