Slogan: "The cheapest economy machine India has ever seen... for a reason." The Sehgal Shamir was a long-running series of reliable and durable but popular Indian microcars. These vehicles were introduced primarily to be VERY affordable and long-lasting on Indian roads, especially for other poor countries. This vehicle also came without a plastic trim if people didn't prefer it, but plastic trims lowered production costs a bit. It had a flurry of variants- roof rack and cargo panel accessories, an EV for the early days of electric cars, a utility/workhorse variant for companies to purchase, a sport version using parts supplied from CGG (Short for [REDACTED] Goat Group), cabriolet, sedan, 2-door, and coupe body styles, and a budget-friendly model equipped with a 1.0-liter engine for low-income countries using parts supplied from CFC (Short for [REDACTED] Fox Company), which was very popular in India. It is mainly inspired by the Tata Nano, which was arguably considered the cheapest car in the world since it costed only a few thousand rupees. Over 20,919,090 were produced.
KUDOS TO @ElmiraElmirson!!! SHE SUGGESTED THIS! GO FOLLOW HER, SHE IS CRIMINALLY UNDERRATED! >:D The whole car was traced by me. You can go get its real-life counterpart here >:D https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/1186337400 Credit to all for music, sounds, etc. and Tata Motors as well as Baba Sehgal (LOL X2)