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Pages in category "World War I flight simulation video games" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Empire Earth (video game) (2001) The Entente: Battlefields WW1 (2003) Empire Earth II (2005) Aggression – Reign over Europe (2008) Warfare 1917 (2008) World War One (2008) Toy Soldiers (2010) [7] Call of Cthulhu: The Wasted Land (2012) The Great War: Western Front (2023)
Every encounter in World War I aerial combat is a close range turning dogfight that can have many outcomes including the planes colliding, spinning out of control, crashing into the ground, being hit by anti aircraft artillery, or being shot down or killed, depending on the game skill level set and the players skill level.
Digital Combat Simulator; Dogfights: The Game; Falcon 4.0 (see FreeFalcon) FlightGear; GeoFS; Gunship 2000; Linux Air Combat; Maestro; MusicVR; Microsoft Flight; Pie in the sky (game engine) Red Baron; Rise of Flight: The First Great Air War; Second Life; SGI Dogfight; SimCopterssl; Space Combat; Top Gun (see: List of Top Gun video games) Tres ...
Closed beta testing of the game began in April 2008. [2] On May 7, 2009, Rise of Flight was officially released in Russia with Russian publisher ND Games. In the US, Rise of Flight: The First Great Air War was premiered at the 2009 E3 and was officially released on June 25, 2009 in the US by its publisher 777 Studios.
A air combat simulator of WW I air combat Entomorph: Plague of the Darkfall: 1995: Mac, Win An action-based role-playing video game; sequel to World of Aden: Thunderscape: Epidemic! 1983: AppII, ATR A strategy game of a global epidemic The Eternal Dagger: 1987: AppII, ATR, C64 A fantasy role-playing video game, the sequel to Wizard's Crown
Red Baron is a combat flight simulation video game for MS-DOS created by Damon Slye at Dynamix. It was published by Sierra On-Line in 1990. The game was ported for Amiga and Macintosh computers in 1992. The game is set on the Western Front of World War I.
The game's working title was Red Baron, until this name was used by Dynamix for Red Baron when the latter had been publicly announced first. [4] Following its original PC release, the game underwent two subsequent patch-style revisions that would add a more realistic plane damage system (source of much of the early controversy, as just one well placed bullet could cause a critical damage and ...