As a kid, I remember playing Microsoft Flight Simulator 5.0 — while I can’t say I really understood all the nuances of the several hundred page manual (which explained how ailerons and rudders and elevators worked), I remember being blown away with the idea that I could fly anywhere on the planet and see something reasonably representative there.
Flash forward a few decades and Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024 can safely be said to be one of the most detailed “digital twins” of the whole planet ever built. In addition to detailed photographic mapping of many locations (I would imagine a combination of aerial surveillance and satellite imagery) and an accurate real world inventory of every helipad (including offshore oil rigs!) and glider airport, they also simulate flocks of animals, plane wear and tear, how snow vs mud vs grass behave when you land on it, wake turbulence, and more! And, just as impressive, it’s being streamed from the cloud to your PC/console when you play!
Who said the metaverse is dead?
People are dressed in clothes and styles matching their countries of origin. They speak in the language of their home countries. Flying from the US to Finland on a commercial plane? Walk through the cabin: you’ll hear both English and Finnish being spoken by the passengers.
Neumann, who has a supervising producer credit on 2013’s Zoo Tycoon and a degree in biology, has a soft-spot for animals and wants to make sure they’re also being more realistically simulated in MSFS 2024. “I really didn’t like the implementation of the animal flights in 2020,” he admitted. “It really bothered me, it was like, ‘Hey, find the elephants!’ and there’s a stick in the UI and there’s three sad-looking elephants.
“There’s an open source database that has all wild species, extinct and living, and it has distribution maps with density over time,” Neumann continued. Asobo is drawing from that database to make sure animals are exactly where they’re supposed to be, and that they have the correct population densities. In different locations throughout the year, “you will find different stuff, but also they’re migrating,” so where you spot a herd of wildebeests or caribou one day might not be the same place you find them the next.
Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024: The First Preview
Seth G. Macy | IGN
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