Head in the cloud(s): the return of Microsoft Flight Simulator

 

 

 

microsoft flight simulator
microsoft flight simulator; screenshot @.flightsimulator.com/

Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Head in the cloud(s): the return of Microsoft Flight Simulator” was written by Matt Kamen, for theguardian.com on Wednesday 24th July 2019 09.00 UTC

Flight Simulator was once one of the jewels in Microsoft’s crown, as close to synonymous with PC gaming as it’s possible to get. The series debuted a staggering 37 years ago, pre-dating even Windows as an operating system, and demanded exacting attention from players as they guided increasingly detailed planes safely through the skies. Over the course of a dozen iterations spanning nearly four decades, the flying experience evolved from blocky cockpit views to full aerial tours with a hangar’s worth of realistically modelled aircraft to get to grips with. It’s been running so long that even Microsoft does not know its sales figures, but Flight Simulator has certainly been played by millions.

Yet as PC gaming blossomed, becoming home to everything from competitive shooters to arthouse narrative games, Flight Simulator’s star began to wane. The last major release was 2006’s Microsoft Flight Simulator X (eventually revamped and repackaged for Steam in 2014), while 2012’s simplified spin-off, Microsoft Flight, had an aborted take off, cancelled a mere five months after launch. The golden age of flight (simulators) has long been over.

Until, that is, this year’s E3 in Los Angeles, where a brand new Microsoft Flight Simulator made a surprise appearance. It was announced during the Xbox conference, for Xbox consoles as well as its more familiar PC home. The franchise’s shock reappearance was very well-received, but even Microsoft’s head of Xbox Phil Spencer wasn’t confident about debuting a flight sim alongside the likes of Gears of War and Forza.

“I remember we were going through the planning, and I was like, ‘could we really get Flight Sim on our stage?’,” Spencer says. “I thought for sure, there’s just no way. But then we saw the visuals.”

As the trailer above demonstrates, the new Flight Simulator looks absolutely astounding. Real-world locations including Dubai, San Francisco, and Egypt are recreated in photorealistic 4K resolution, with geography and textures captured from satellite imagery. Players will be able to control numerous authentic planes from light aircrafts to passenger vehicles, set their own flight paths, and navigate through unpredictable scenarios thrown up by Microsoft’s Azure cloud computing platform, which leverages artificial intelligence and machine learning to dynamically shift flight conditions. This will keep players on their toes – get too comfortable running a commuter flight, and Azure might throw up sudden shifts in the weather, turning a sunny flight into a battle to keep aloft as storm conditions roll in.

Spencer first saw footage of Flight Simulator in “probably February or March”, and was so taken aback that he had to confirm with Microsoft’s studios head Shannon Loftis that it was actually real. “There were scenes that look better than photorealistic,” he recalls.

If Flight Simulator looks ahead of its time, that’s because, in many ways, it is. Not only do the underlying AI and graphical technologies behind its creation push current gaming technology to its limits, but they begin to surpass them. The geographic data alone, needed to render the world players will be flying around, comes in at two petabytes – equivalent to 20,000 Blu-ray discs.

Microsoft Flight Simulator screenshot: a view from the cockpit.
Microsoft Flight Simulator screenshot: a view from the cockpit. Photograph: Microsoft

It will be far in excess of what can fit on a disc or be reasonably downloaded, and so Flight Simulator is at the vanguard of a new breed of game that can only live, perhaps fittingly, in the cloud. Microsoft servers will do a lot of the visual processing remotely and beam the results to a player’s screen, doing away with the need for a super-powerful PC at home (though you will need a fast internet connection). This is part of a wider shift that is already under way in video games: as technology improves and developers strive to create ever more realistic virtual worlds, games balloon in size, and the hardware needed to run them becomes more and more expensive. Offloading some of that data and processing to cloud servers is the solution that Microsoft – among other companies, such as Google – is betting on.

For games like Flight Simulator, the cloud provides “a system that kind of understands how much capability I need at any point,” Spencer explains. “It’s no different than what we’ve done in years past, streaming into available RAM that’s available on our consoles.” Flight Simulator will have an offline mode when it launches in 2020, but given how heavily it relies on data streamed from Microsoft servers, it’s likely to be severely truncated.

Always-online games are sometimes controversial – not everyone likes logging into a server every time they want to play (and indeed, some players aren’t able to). But in this case, the advantages are surely worth it. “We’re getting to the point with games where there’s the [question of] how much data can you actually download and store?” says Spencer. “[But] there’s also the matter of how much data do I need to have locally at any time? I’m not playing the beginning, middle and end of every game at every time … Not only do we have two petabytes of data behind [Flight Simulator], but we’ve got Azure AI running [so] you have different levels of fidelity in different parts of the planet. As you’re flying around, you’re seeing the highest buildings and the weather’s changing in real time. It is just unreal.”

Ahead of Flight Simulator’s release in 2020, Microsoft has launched an Insider program, to share development updates with players and provide early access to the game in return for feedback from early adopters. Flight Simulator’s approaching return will be watched closely by its many passionate fans – but if Microsoft can stick the landing, this will be a game beyond the wildest dreams of anyone who played in the 80s and 90s.

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Once you have it, you’ll never want to walk again. Find out how to fly the Icaros.

icaros flight 2016-000

Anything is possible in virtual reality. You can discover space or explore the Amazonas, fly through the perfect wave, or even combine your workout with a unique flying experience. A new fitness and gaming device developed by Hyve Innovation Design we can train our body and mind.

Simply with your movements on the Icaros you control and determine the flight path or diving path in the game. It sounds quite easy and so it is – but it needs a little exercise not to crash. Once you have it, you’ll never want to walk again, says Icaros fathers.

icaros flight 2016-

Icaros simulator is the Overall Winner of the ISPO Brandnew Award 2016. You can experience ICAROS at the ISPO Munich (the leading international platform for the sport business elite) from January 24th – 27th, 2016. Every year, more than 2,560 international exhibitors present their latest products from the segments of Outdoor, Ski, Action, Performance Sports, Textrends, Health & Fitness and Sourcing at ISPO MUNICH to over 81,000 visitors from more than 109 countries.

Hyve Design innovates, designs and develops groundbreaking innovations. The list of Hyve’s innovations includes The Grindboard carbon longboard, MAN 175D Marine Diesel Engine, Tyrolit knife sharpener, B/S/H Styline kitchen machine, Flexi Vario dog lead, MED-EL Samba audio processor, Audi Service key Reader, Telefunken Jet Flyer scooter, motorised ePaddle, Sunstar Virtus modular ibike kit, Paket Butler domestic package station and many more. They have even a Rapide Carbon Knitting technique. This is a rapid prototyping procedure with which a pretreated “prepreg” carbon strip is “printed”. This means that the carbon strip is interwoven with, e.g., an easy-melting PLA, from which it is possible to generate a three-dimensional mass without previous form. After the carbon form is firmly set, it can be easily treated with resin that will then render a high load-bearing, finished carbon composite component.

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The world’s first exclusive personal flight simulator

Innovative Flight Simulator.

Ivolo simulator spot-

Luxury deserves freedom, enthusiasm, and true fun, say Cremona-based Xesa Systems, the creator of the world’s first exclusive personal simulator called Ivolo.

Ivolo is the first exclusive personal simulator of the world, providing all the real sensations of a moving craft on ground, over the seas and in the air. Inside the cabin you experience the real flight environment thanks to the best aerospace simulation technology (immersive visual system, two-seater fully operational to drive, commands with control loading, and customizable cockpit).

The flight experience is recreated providing the user all the real sensations of a flying session, with the ability to set custom scenarios and environment. The reproductible effects include: aircraft manoeuvres, ground effects, in-flight turbulences, landing gear effects, variations due to engine failures & flap operations.

ivolo The world's first exclusive personal simulator Ivolo simulator

With the ability to satisfy even the most demanding spirit of adventure and discovery, Ivolo is the innovative solution for spending exciting moments alone, with family and friends or with guests: it can be easily installed in private properties, or even on big yachts…

Ivolo is provided upon request with particular care for luxury details, such as golden parts, jewels and special light effects. The interiors can be delivered in finewood, and other precious materials.

The simulation experience is coming with a set of accessories like retractable automatic ladder, air conditioning in the cabin, emergency systems, perimetral safety fences, hangar designed to best fit in any property.

Ivolo simulator spot

Ivolo custom skin -

What it’s like to pilot a commercial jet

Take seat of the pilot in command in the ultra-realistic Airbus A320 simulator. A new flight simulator called the iFlight Simulator Val d’Europe lets amateurs see what it’s like to pilot a commercial jet. The new attraction opened just outside of Disneyland Paris allows visitors to take the controls of a virtual Airbus A320 commercial jet. … Read more