How Microsoft Flight Simulator returned to the skies:
Let's play a quick game of word association: Microsoft — Windows? Excel? Xbox? All solid answers. But for me, for a while in the '90s at least, I would have immediately answered "Flight Simulator." Microsoft Flight Simulator is the very first thing I can remember ever doing on a computer, sat on my granddad's lap as we soared across blocky landscapes together with a Sidewinder joystick. It is one of Microsoft's all-time iconic brands.
It's also a brand that the company has more or less ignored in the past decade-plus. The last release, Flight Simulator X, came out in 2006, and a few years later, its developer, Aces Game Studio, was closed as part of widespread layoffs at Microsoft. A 2012 free-to-play spinoff called Microsoft Flight was less than well-received.
In just a few weeks, though, Microsoft is releasing perhaps the biggest upgrade to the series in its 38-year history. The new title, developed by French studio Asobo and simply called Microsoft Flight Simulator, is an ambitious attempt to leverage Microsoft's Bing Maps data and Azure-powered procedural generation technology to render our planet in unprecedented detail.
I've been playing a pre-release alpha version for a couple of weeks, and it's frankly astonishing. This is a full-throttle effort from Microsoft to re-create the natural world and the magic of flight. And while it carries the weight of an iconic series, it feels like it came from nowhere. Why is Microsoft reviving Flight Simulator now?
So my dear Soylentils, how many of you have played Microsoft Flight Simulator and if so, what did you think?
(Score: 2) by jasassin on Tuesday August 04 2020, @12:07AM (2 children)
After reading all the childish ignorant posts on this subject so far, I was compelled to share this [youtube.com] link.
Procedurally generated terrain.
Real time real world weather conditions.
Adjustable levels of simulation (from needing to press every switch and lever to start the plane and take off, to a more simplified experience).
Insane cockpit detail, down to the rivets and leather in the seats.
Reflection of the panel displays off the inside of the cockpit windows at night.
Clouds that cast shadows on themselves and other clouds.
It pulls data from Azure as you play for unprecedented levels of world accuracy and detail.
Before you act like petulant children who need their bottoms powdered, maybe you should learn a little bit about the subject before you just start spewing cliche anti Microsoft bile.
This simulator is absolutely amazing.
jasassin@gmail.com GPG Key ID: 0xE6462C68A9A3DB5A
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 04 2020, @12:32AM (1 child)
Does it simulate the 737 Max 8 ?
(Score: 2) by jasassin on Tuesday August 04 2020, @01:06AM
No. Here's the list [windowscentral.com].
jasassin@gmail.com GPG Key ID: 0xE6462C68A9A3DB5A