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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. D.
The Fokker Eindecker fighters were a series of German World War I monoplane single-seat fighter aircraft designed by Dutch engineer Anthony Fokker. [2] Developed in April 1915, the first Eindecker ("Monoplane") was the first purpose-built German fighter aircraft and the first aircraft to be fitted with a synchronization gear, enabling the pilot to fire a machine gun through the arc of the ...
Warbirds (video game) (1991) Wings 2: Aces High (1992) Dogfight: 80 Years of Aerial Warfare (1993) Aces of the Deep (1994) Wings of Glory (1994) Dawn Patrol (1994) Flying Corps (1996) Red Baron II (1997) Master of the Skies: The Red Ace (2000) Red Ace Squadron (2001) Wings of War (2004) Snoopy vs. the Red Baron (2006) First Eagles: The Great ...
The magazine concluded that "this game is a must for WWI fans and flight simulation fans". [5] In a 1991 survey of World War I flight simulations, Computer Gaming World called Knights in the Sky "the most realistic", superior to Dynamix's Red Baron for "the advanced air combat simulation jocks"; [ 6 ] a survey of strategy and war games that ...
Fighter Ace was a massively multiplayer online combat flight simulation game series in which one flies World War II fighter planes in combat against other players and virtual pilots. Each of the games ran on a subscription-based model with players paying monthly to compete against each other.
Wings of War is a World War I combat flight simulator developed by Czech studio Silver Wish Games and published by Gathering for Microsoft Windows and Xbox in 2004. The game was a standard wartime flight simulator with the underused setting of World War I.
A first-person flight simulator game, the player takes the role of a World War I ace in a biplane fighting on the side of the Allies. The game is named after the nickname of Manfred von Richthofen, German flying ace. The game uses the same monochrome vector graphics and similar hardware as Atari's own Battlezone; both were developed at the same ...
Lacking an indigenous aviation industry, the Ottoman Empire primarily relied on Germany for aircraft, although a number of French pre-war aircraft were used in the early part of the war. The Ottoman Empire also operated two Avro 504 light fighter reconnaissance aircraft.