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Saitek is a designer and manufacturer of consumer electronics founded in 1979 by Swiss technologist Eric Winkler. They are best known for their PC gaming controllers, mice, keyboards, and their numerous analogue flight controllers such as joysticks, throttles, and rudder pedals.
Combat Flight Simulator 3: Battle for Europe; F1 Challenge '99-'02; Flight Simulator 2004; Flight Simulator X; JetPakNG (Flight Simulator 2004 mod) LunarPilot (Flight Simulator 2004 mod) Mediterranean Air War (Combat Flight Simulator 3 mod) NASCAR Racing 2003 Season; Over Flanders Fields (Combat Flight Simulator 3 mod) Richard Burns Rally; TOCA ...
F-16 simulator side-stick controller functional allocation (for the right hand) F-16 simulator throttle functional allocation (for the left hand). HOTAS, an acronym of hands on throttle-and-stick, is the concept of placing buttons and switches on the throttle lever and flight control stick in an aircraft cockpit.
Microsoft Flight Simulator X: Discontinued 2006–2014 Aces Game Studio: Xbox Game Studios: Microsoft Windows: Single-player, Multiplayer: It is the sequel to Microsoft Flight Simulator 2004 and the tenth installment of the Microsoft Flight Simulator series, which was first released in 1982.
Gamepad / Flight Stick / HOTAS Euro Truck Simulator 2: Driving Simulation No Gamepad / Steering Wheel EVE: Valkyrie: Space Dogfighter No [16] Gamepad / Flight Stick Flight Simulator X: Flight Simulation No Flight Stick / HOTAS / Yoke / Rudder Pedals / Gamepad / Mouse+Keyboard Gunjack: Turret Shooter No Gamepad IL-2 Sturmovik: Great Battles ...
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.
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FlightGear started as an online proposal in 1996 by David Murr, living in the United States. He was dissatisfied with proprietary, available, simulators like the Microsoft Flight Simulator, citing motivations of companies not aligning with the simulators' players ("simmers"), and proposed a new flight simulator developed by volunteers over the Internet.