I love a good special edition car. Not just a sticker special created by the dealer to shift something that’s not freeing floor space quickly enough, but something that’s weird, wacky, and preferably dreamed up by the manufacturer to celebrate a car either being introduced or honorably phased out.
The French have been especially good at this, as the Renault Twingo got a memorable United Colors of Benetton special edition to mark the particularly good sales of the then-new Twingo. The Twingo Benetton was available in five colors with a multicolor patchwork upholstery that really made the edition stand out.

Peugeot did numerous different special editions for its ‘80s and ‘90s hatchbacks, from the tennis-themed 205 Green and Roland Garros to the 106 “Kid” with its denim seats and leather patches on the door cards (which said SEATS FIVE – DRIVE CLEAN. I didn’t know the French were so terrible at puns).
Another 205 special edition was the Indiana, which was beige inside out, with cactus-themed logos and saddlebags – it was obviously more Indiana Jones than Indiana, the state. When the 205 finally bowed in the late ‘90s, it was sold as the Sacré Numéro (the Sacred Number) and Forever editions.

Volkswagen displayed a good sense of humor with its Harlequin/Harlekin Golf and Polo, which famously had mismatched doors and body panels. It’s generally in the same ballpark as the Twingo Benetton, which used similar colors, just distributed between cars.
In Europe, Volkswagen also bet heavily on rock-band-themed editions, selling the Golf Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd, Bon Jovi and Golf Convertible Genesis edition, along with a Genesis-themed Polo.

But one of the more obscure editions was the Ford Mondeo’s Si Citrine edition. While the Mondeo was largely a competent, but not especially wildly designed car, and neither were its Contour and Mystique cousins in North America, the Citrine Yellow was extremely in-your-face.

In 1993, all 211 Ford dealers in the UK were allocated a special Citrine Yellow car, at least one, to mark the Mondeo’s launch. Based on the sporty Mondeo Si, it’s a lurid neon yellow edition that’s conceptually comparable to Dodge’s Nitro Yellow Green Neon in its ‘90sness, and among all the more normal Mondeos on dealer forecourts it must have really stood out, especially as the cars also got a swoopy Ford RS body kit and special wheels.

The special edition Mondeos were available in 4-door sedan and 5-door liftback form, as the regular Si was. To complement the yellow exterior, the interior was blue with special upholstery on the body-hugging sports seats.

You could order yellow Fords in the ‘90s, as the Escort was available with a more warm yellow paint colour, and Citrine made that look boring in comparison. Outside the UK, Citrine also features in the 1993 Mondeo paint and trim brochure, but it’s highly unlikely it was a popular choice.

A British Ford dealer chain by the name of Hendy received ten of these, as it had been creating its own editions earlier and knew it could shift them. To create its own RSi edition from the special-edition cars, Hendy slapped chequered flag-themed graphics on the already yellow Mondeos and added diamond cut seven-spoke wheels, adaptive shocks, Eibach sports suspension and hotter cams.
The “normal” Citrine Yellow edition cars had the 136-horsepower, two-liter Zetec engine, but these ten Hendy cars produced 150 hp thanks to the tickled engine. At least one of them survives, handily with a “WOW” license plate.

At least two Citrine Yellow RS bodykit Mondeos were registered in Finland. One surfaced recently looking about as sad as any forgotten 1993 Mondeo would, with the yellow paint already faded, rust peeking here and there, and the bodykit partially damaged. In the Facebook ad, it was also said to have rotten floors. The two Finnish cars had Morette quad headlights from new, which adds a certain something to the already bodykitted look. They also had the same blue-yellow seats as the British cars.
In the UK, as the ‘90s and ‘00s tuning culture is again appreciated, the Citrine Yellow Mondeos are experiencing another heyday. They’re popping up at enthusiast events, with faithful fan backing and dedicated Facebook groups. The pictured good-condition car was auctioned by Brightwells Auctions in late 2025, and it only had 49,000 miles on the clock at that time.
The Mondeo would always be shadowed by its rear-drive predecessor, the Sierra, and while 2.5 million first-generation Mondeos were made, so many have been scrapped that the least common variants are now seriously rare – including the 4×4 variant. Few are restored to showroom condition, but if there’s a Mondeo that deserves it, it’s the Citrine.
Top graphic image: Brightwells Auctions









The 2005 Mazda 3 SP23 was a weird one! Google says about 3600 were made.
The VW Beetle Fender Edition, 2500 were made.
Neiman Marcus Lincoln Blackwood apparently only 50 were made.
That’s what I got off the top of my head except for the numbers, I had to look those up.
Macho Trans Am’s (which were brought up on here recently)
The Ford Focus Kona, complete with special paint matched Kona mountain bike!
I’ve owned two Kona’s myself, but no Foci.
Does the 2002 VW GTI 337 Edition count? Only 1500 were brought to the US, and fewer to Canada. Not sure how many were made in Europe. But it included cosmetic changes, larger brakes, rims and the 6 spd over a normal Mk4 of the time.
None to Europe, I believe.
I think maybe the 2005 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara Special Edition which was not to be confused with the Sahara trim level as it was actually a Rubicon trim level but was a tie-in for the movie Sahara. And they only made 1000.
I nominate the Bentley Bentayga Falconry by Mulliner
Five words that you’d never thought you’d see together
Ha, I’d never seen those Mondeos before but happened to see one in my FB feed last night.
I feel this is a somewhat vague question. Does a limited production model count as a special edition, or only a variant of an otherwise normal car?
I’m guessing it’s more the latter so my answer is the Canada-only 1985 Mercury Marquis LTS.
1968 Bengal Charger
https://www.autoevolution.com/news/1968-dodge-bengal-charger-the-nfl-inspired-muscle-car-you-can-t-have-185664.html
The Cadillac Seville Gucci Edition has to be up there. Imagine proposing doing that to a CT5 or a Vistiq today to the GM board.
EDIT: I found one, and it was a 350 Diesel to boot. Gucci print Landau top and gucci logo on the hubcaps and hood badge is just perfection.
In a similar vein, the Chrysler 300 John Varvatos edition
All I remember is thinking “why the 300?” and the commercial with Iggy Pop
EDIT: Oh that Seville is amazing, the diesel is definitely what makes it
How about the AMC SC/Ramblers?
Super low volume, a defunct also-ran car company, and a paint job rivaling David’s Firebird. I love ’em for their oddity, and of course the giant backward facing arrow on the hood.
But are they obscure? I’d say maybe at this point as older folks who remember them die off, but they were pretty well known in the muscle car scene back in the day, I think. Admittedly, I have a bias given my dad owned one, so I always knew about them. But I think my point stands that if it was popular, low volume doesn’t matter for obscurity.
Guy with a collection garage up the street from me had one for sale on his lot.
Pretty neat.
The obscure early Group A touring car homologation specials (before Group A became the top category in rallying following Group B ban), including Evolution versions of the first half of the 80s:
“1985 was a year, which mirrored the ’83 season in a way, with its silly discussions about what’s legal – and what’s not. This time however, it was not Walkinshaw who was suspected of illegal tricks, it was Volvo who happened to homologate the 240 turbo in an evolution version – which a rear spoiler, big turbo, intercooler and water injection. After production of the 500 cars and subsquent homologation (with close inspection of 23 cars), the other 477 cars were robbed of their competition equipment and sold as standard 240 turbo roadcars. Not illegal by any means, but it left a bad taste in the mouth of their competitors. The FISA reacted in July, after trying to buy an Evolution car in a few European countries (which failed): Volvo had to release the names of the 500 owners of the evolution cars. Volvo didn’t react, so the “evolution” homologation would end on September 1, 1985. Later (after the factory holiday!) Volvo could manage to reveal a few evolution cars in Sweden, so the ban was lifted.”
From: http://touringcarracing.net/index.html
The 7-Up Mustang. My friend’s late father had one and her mom keeps it now.
It’s such a good looking color combo in real life, even if you don’t know the backstory.
In that vein, the SN95 Mustang Cobra’s optional mystichrome paint was a huge thing at the time, but is now at best a minor curiosity.
Only bummer about those is there is no exterior badging or anything to denote it’s not just another LX. It’s definitely a IYKYK car.
Do we count the Toyota Classic as a special edition of the Hilux? It does carry a Hilux chassis code (YN86) with its own unique model code (VPPDTC).
The car that practically survived later in its life on limited editions was the original Mini, some of which with fewer than 500 units produced, might well be considered obscure.
4WD Mondeo?!? And Ford didn’t make it happen in the States to juice Contour/Mystique sales? That would have been a perfect Mercury.
The other Mondeos that generally deserve preservation (and aren’t touring cars) might be the rare SVT Contours here in the US, which I think we’re a limited run. There’s one that always shows up at the Peoria area Cars & Coffee, and it’s pristine.
The most obscure special edition car I can think of was the Chevrolet Nova Twin Cam of 1988. An E80 Corolla sedan with the FX-16 hot hatch engine and suspension, black paint, alloy wheels, and red stripes. And a GM Badge. The subsequent Geo Prizm GSi sold longer, but that was an E90 Corolla underneath. I want a Twin Cam.
The Volvo C30 Boston Red Sox Edition existed for some reason
https://www.volvocars.com/us/media/press-releases/468360E869298841/
Kevin Youkilis was a Volvo guy
Jason already covered the wackadoodle Scout II editions.
https://www.theautopian.com/the-original-scout-had-some-really-half-assed-special-editions-glorious-garbage/
The Scout 80/800 had a few specials, too, but my lunch hour is ending and all I can remember is the “Chamagne Scout”.
Are special editions always co-branded as promos?
I want that Citrine Yellow right now.
I was thinking that might be a bit too bright for my taste and I love a good yellow. This one reminds me too much of newer fire trucks. To each their own.
But that seat upholstery? Damn that’s sweet. Sign me up.