I'm in no way saying you should rush out and buy a copy of CFS2 just to play The Dambusters, but existing owners looking for a near-authentic recreation of Guy Gibson's wartime exploits won't be disappointed with the efforts Just Flight has gone to.
(Carling Black Label, anyone?)Īnd it's all done extremely well. You get a couple of RAF bases, some very detailed models of the Lancaster, Mosquito and Wellington aircraft to fly in either CFS2 or Microsoft Flight Simulator 2000/ Microsoft Flight Simulator 2002, and naturally you get the bouncing bomb to drop on several German goalkeeping guards. Bottom line is that you get 25 missions utilising the existing engine - inherent flaws and all in the case of CFS2. Use advanced aircraft controls to fly and engage in combat with enemy planes, drop bombs, and perform other missions. If Kingdom Come is the ultimate 'walking around in the woods' sim, this is going to be the ultimate 'flying around looking at stuff'sim. We're not talking a radical departure here. Though god drat having those graphics for flying over Guadalcanal when Microsoft remakes Combat Flight Simulator 2 would be orgasmic. A tribute to the brave men of the 617 Squadron of RAF Bomber Command, this takes the basic Combat Flight Simulator 2 engine and transforms it into a dedicated WWII bombing simulator. Unlike the simple Gmax cut-and-paste jobs that most flight sim add-on packs are made from, this has had some serious time spent on it in the development labs. all the tima is a companion to Microsoft and Sublogic flight simulators. The Dambusters is a little different though. But right now, if you're using flight simulator software, you're missing out on. If a flight sim fan wants extra liveries for his 747s, he's going to buy the 747 Extra Liveries Kit'. It's only relevant to the foot fetishists in the crowd, and they'll already have their preferred colour choices. Perceived wisdom has it that reviewing a flight sim add-on is as pointless as evaluating a pom star by the colour of her nail polish.