Click Monaco: Auto

The cars this year? A Bugatti Bolide, a Pagani Huayra R, and a Gordon Murray T.50.

Click.

“Mr. Dubois,” said a clipped, elegant voice. “You applied to the Auto Click Monaco charity lottery. You won. Please stop reporting our emails as spam.” auto click monaco

“I… don’t even have a driver’s license,” he confessed into the microphone. Silence. Then laughter—kind, genuine, Monégasque laughter. The cars this year

Auto Click Monaco wasn’t a scam. It was the world’s most exclusive automated racing charity event. Wealthy car collectors donated hypercars. A custom AI system—nicknamed “The Finger”—drove them around the F1 circuit with inhuman precision. But the twist was this: for twenty-four hours, anyone who donated could “auto-click” a virtual pedal online. Each click added micro-commands to the AI’s driving loop: a fraction more throttle here, a slightly earlier braking point there. The person whose clicking pattern resulted in the fastest lap won the car. You won

Léo Dubois had never won anything in his life. Not a school raffle, not a scratch card, not even a round of rock-paper-scissors. So when the email arrived— Congratulations, you’ve been selected for the Ultimate Monaco Grand Prix Hypercar Experience —he deleted it.

Click.