Please see the most recent updates in the "Where did the .com name go?" thread. Posts number 16 and 17.
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it's NOT a GAME! it's a SIMULATOR !!
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it's NOT a GAME! it's a SIMULATOR !!
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it's NOT a GAME! it's a SIMULATOR !!
This is going into a meme generator later today!
As for control settings. Does anyone know if it affects saved profiles, or just the default settings?
I guess the question is if you want a Reno add-on tier B-17 or want to wait for the Flying Iron example? Can't see Microsoft working with an Apple TV+ series at any rate.Why no Masters of the Air update?
This wouldn't surprise me with Microsoft's ownership of Bethesda and the upcoming Fallout TV series.I think it's a great idea - lets do Fallout Vertibirds next MS

Now if it had been Oblivion....
Nice! I have a first edition paperback in very good condition.I've been a "hard-core" fan of the Dune series ever since reading the first book in the original series back about 50 years ago. Of all the attempts on screen with versions of the ornithopter, I think new MSFS is the first one that is even close to what Frank Herbert imagined. In the Illustrated version of the first book, the images were all okayed by Frank Herbert, and this is very close to the version he approved. My first thoughts reading the book was that it must look like a dragonfly, so this one is about as close as it gets to my imagination back then.
The whole Dune story is much longer than most think. Someone above mentioned the original series covering about 4000 years. Below is a pic of my Frank Herbert/Brian Herbert bookshelf, in chronological order. The Dune story starts with the far-left book, "Eve" and up until just recently ends at "Sandworms of Dune", just in front of the shark's nose, covering 15,000 years. The original Dune Trilogy pointed to come in the middle of the whole thing. The complete story does tie back into Earth, which is long gone before the first book, "Eve".
Arguably, Dune is probably the greatest science fiction story ever written but was almost never published. No publishing company was interested in it. Fortunately, Sterling Lanier, a friend of mine later in life and editor of the Chilton Car Repair Manuals thought it deserved a shot and had Dune published. But he also got fired from Chilton because it didn't do well at first and they thought would never fly. Guess they were a bit short sighted on that call.
Forest
Is there any way to fly in the DUNE scenario without being on a mission?