When it rains, you’ll see lightning and streaks of water. The rendering of the sky and clouds is simply, if I may use the word, awesome. The app supports nighttime, daylight, dusk and rain storm conditions, and they’ll be thrown at you randomly as you start each attempt. There’s very little control over the weather. Basically you have control over the throttle, speed brakes, gear and attitude/roll control. The navigation, in terms of finding the carrier, is rudimentary. The simulation, er, game, doesn’t much care if you overspeed with the gear down. There’s background music that has a nice beat, but you can mute the music separately. This game packs a lot of delirious fun for zero dollars, so you can try it before you fork over the big bucks. What more could you ask for? And there’s a US$0.99 version that’s ad-free. The Lite version is a free game (with ads). One might be tempted to wonder about the technical level and the respectability of the app. The instruments are good-looking but incomplete. One is using the tilt of the iPad, calibrated by the accelerometer, to fly the F/A-18 and not a joystick. Rather, one can just play a fun game with terrific visuals, pass some time - and the satisfaction of getting better in the game is palpable. As a result, one might, at first glance, be tempted to consider this a highly technical simulator. The Apple iPad is capable of some fabulous graphics. This game has great visuals and is easy to fly, but it’s not really a technical flight simulator. So it’s a great candidate for a game, both as a challenge and as a sobering introduction to the real thing. Landing a jet fighter on an aircraft carrier is one of the hardest things humans do.
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