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The following are flight simulator software applications that can be downloaded or played for free. Several items are outdated. Please notice 'free' is not the same as open source. Free games may have limited options or include advertisements.
Released in October 2001, and is the 8th installment of the Microsoft Flight Simulator video game series. A version called Professional Edition was released at the same time as standard edition that added two aircraft, a flight instructor feature, and an editor to create buildings and aircraft.
Microsoft Flight is an amateur flight simulation from Microsoft Studios created as a spin-off of the Microsoft Flight Simulator series. [2] The game [2] is offered "free-to-play"; charging players for downloading extra content, aircraft or scenery. [3] In July 2012, Microsoft ceased development of the game permanently to re-align its "long-term ...
Microsoft Flight Simulator X is the third most recent major release of Microsoft Flight Simulator, and the last one developed by Aces Game Studio. It includes a graphics engine upgrade and compatibility with preview DirectX 10 and Windows Vista. It was released on October 17, 2006, in North America.
Flight Simulator (1980 video game) Flight Simulator II (Sublogic) Flight Unlimited; Flight Unlimited II; Flight Unlimited III; FlightGear; FlightSimCon; Fly! Fly! II; List of free flight simulators; Freedom Wings
YSFlight is a free, open-source multi-platform flight simulator, developed and published by Soji Yamakawa since 1999. [1] Since its initial release, it has received annual updates, with the most recent stable version released in 2018. [contradictory]
Combat flight simulators are vehicle simulation games, amateur flight simulation computer programs used to simulate military aircraft and their operations. These are distinct from dedicated flight simulators used for professional pilot and military flight training which consist of realistic physical recreations of the actual aircraft cockpit, often with a full-motion platform.
Prior to the rise of video games, Sega produced Jet Rocket (1970), a first-person arcade combat flight simulator electro-mechanical game (EM game) featuring cockpit controls that could move the player aircraft around a landscape displayed on a screen and shoot missiles onto targets that explode when hit. [2]