In My Winter Car, vehicles are survival tools. Each car, bike, or machine behaves differently depending on temperature, road conditions, and maintenance. Some are yours to keep, some are temporary, and many exist purely to make the world feel alive.

Understanding which vehicles you can drive, when you can access them, and how they perform in winter is essential if you want to progress without constant breakdowns.

Vehicles overview in My Winter Car

Vehicle typeDriveableOwnershipMain purpose
Project carYesPlayer-ownedLong-term progression
Daily driverYesPlayer-ownedEarly mobility
Utility vehiclesYesSituationalTowing and heavy work
Job vehiclesLimitedTask-basedEarning money
NPC vehiclesNoWorld-onlyImmersion

List of all cars in My Winter Car

Here is a complete list of all vehicles in My Winter Car:

1) Corris Rivett

  • Driveable: Yes
  • Location: Starts as a bare shell at your home garage; parts are scattered across the map
  • Notes: Main project car you build from scratch; rear-wheel drive and very unforgiving on icy roads if poorly assembled

2) Sorbett

  • Driveable: Yes
  • Location: Parked outside your cabin at the very start of the game
  • Notes: Your reliable early-game daily driver; front-wheel drive makes it easier to control in winter conditions

3) Jonnez ES (Moped)

  • Driveable: Yes
  • Location: Available early in the world, similar to its placement in My Summer Car
  • Notes: Extremely fuel-efficient but slow; risky on snowy roads and highways

4) Kekmet (Tractor)

  • Driveable: Yes
  • Location: Found in the rural areas of the map
  • Notes: Very slow but powerful; ideal for towing stuck vehicles and hauling heavy items through deep snow

5) Bachglotz

  • Driveable: Yes (temporary)
  • Location: Fleetari’s repair shop
  • Notes: Loaner car provided while your Rivett is being serviced; powerful but not owned by the player

5) Gifu (Vacuum Truck)

  • Driveable: Limited / job-based
  • Location: Appears during sewage and utility jobs
  • Notes: Primarily used for work tasks; not freely usable like player vehicles in early builds

6) Hayosiko Pace

  • Driveable: No
  • Location: Near your uncle’s shed
  • Notes: Static van used as scenery; cannot be entered or driven

7) Heppa (Red Pickup)

  • Driveable: No
  • Location: Driven by the NPC Pena
  • Notes: NPC-only vehicle; cannot be stolen or interacted with

8) Burnet Ferndale

  • Driveable: No
  • Location: Seen around the world as traffic or parked scenery
  • Notes: Classic muscle car used for immersion only

9) Taxi

  • Driveable: Yes (job-restricted)
  • Location: Taxi office and town routes
  • Notes: Only usable while doing taxi jobs; not free-roam accessible

10) Bus

  • Driveable: No (rideable only)
  • Location: Bus stops across the map
  • Notes: Used for fast travel as a passenger; cannot be controlled

11) GalaxyLiner (Highway Van)

  • Driveable: No
  • Location: Highways and main roads
  • Notes: Ambient traffic vehicle that adds realism to road travel

12) Amis Cars (Town NPC Vehicles)

  • Driveable: No
  • Location: Town areas, events, and races
  • Notes: Includes various sedans and racers driven by NPCs only

How vehicle drivability works in My Winter Car

Drivability in My Winter Car is intentionally restrictive. Vehicles are affected by cold starts, frozen components, fuel quality, and snow-covered roads. You often need to warm engines, defrost windows, and drive cautiously to avoid spinning out or stalling. Unlike arcade-style games, every vehicle demands preparation before you even turn the key.

Some vehicles are always accessible, others appear only during jobs, and several cannot be driven at all. This balance reinforces the game’s focus on realism and planning.

Why vehicle availability matters

Not every vehicle is meant to be driven freely. The game intentionally limits access to reinforce dependency, planning, and risk. Losing access to your daily driver or crashing your project car can halt progress entirely, which is why understanding availability is as important as driving skill.

Player-owned vehicles in My Winter Car

These are the ones you can directly use and rely on during gameplay.

Corris Rivett

Your main buildable project car, based on the Ford Taunus TC. You start with just a shell and must collect parts to make it road-legal and drive it. It’s rear-wheel-drive, so snowy and icy roads are challenging.
Location: Found/assembled throughout the game world.

Sorbett

Your starting daily driver. A small front-wheel-drive hatchback waiting outside your cabin at the beginning. Perfect for early errands while working on the Rivett.
Location: Outside your cabin at start.

Jonnez ES

A moped returning from My Summer Car. Limited in speed but useful for quick scouting and easy fuel economy.
Location: Appears in the game (may be playable or becoming available).


Thanks for staying till the end! If the vehicles guide for My Winter Car made things easier or gave you useful insights, we’d love to hear your thoughts. Drop your feedback or questions in the comments—we’re always active and ready to assist with anything that still feels unclear.