Microsoft Flight Simulator Typhoon

Microsoft Flight Simulator Eurofighter Typhoon & Tallinn Airport Get New Screenshots

Third-party developers shared some more interesting news and images about Microsoft Flight Simulator add-ons.

Today third-party developers shared some more interesting news about Microsoft Flight Simulator add-ons.

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We start with DC Designs and CJ Simulations, which provided a new look at their Eurofighter Typhoon, alongside a development update.

“I spent most of this week working on the CJ Simulations Typhoon, during which I added multiple further liveries, including all Royal Air Force squadrons, all international operators and one or two “special” schemes. The addition of chocks, covers, lights, Interactive Checklist and manual filled up the rest of the time spent, and CodenameJack did heroic work not just on avionics but also on understanding the cool afterburner effects created by Asobo ( burner flames no longer “pop” into existence but fade in and out as per real life, illuminating the surrounding airframe at night too ). This will now be rolled out on all other aircraft in the DC Designs inventory in their forthcoming updates. The same process of additions is now on-going for the Harrier, the majority of which will be done next week.

This leads me to an important point. I still keep seeing messages or comments ( sometimes quite aggressive and accusing ones ) demanding to know why the other products have not been updated yet? “It’s been months. Why haven’t you done it yet?” Some people accuse me of putting new products ahead of existing ones, as though it’s all about money and nothing else. Nothing could be further from the truth.

I get genuinely excited about doing updates. I like to see new stuff coming out on older products and seeing users’ delight at the improvements on aircraft they may have owned for a long time. But the example of the afterburner coding above is a perfect illustration of why it’s not an overnight process. These things have to be *learned* – developers have barely scratched the surface of what MSFS is capable of, let alone its future potential. Updating an aircraft isn’t something that we just sit down and spend a day or two on. It can take weeks. And no matter how much we add, you can guarantee that within a month or two, new stuff we’ve learned or that has been introduced to the sim will become something we want to add to them. Currently, it’s a continuous rolling process of updates alongside the production of new airplanes, and it probably won’t change for a while until MSFS really settles down. The more aircraft we produce, the more updates we will need to work through.

Be patient – if your favourite airplane from whichever ( reputable ) developer you purchased it from has not seen an update for a while, chances are it’s already being worked upon. It’s why I mention them here from time to time, so folks know I have not forgotten about them.

In one final piece of news, Sim Acoustics delivered the Harrier’s custom sound pack and it’s AWESOME!!! The Harrier’s characteristic whine is alive and well. I will be posting a demo video of it soon on the You Tube channel!”

Drzewiecki Design also published new screenshots, and this time around they’re of Tallinn Airport (EETN), serving the capital of Estonia.

At the moment, we don’t have a release window yet, but like all of this developer’s work, it looks really promising.

If you’d like to read more about Microsoft Flight Simulator add-ons, you can enjoy our recent reviews of the Twin OtterAuckland International AirportSkiathos AirportAthens International AirportBergamo Orio al Serio AirportAmami AirportBristol AirportMarrakech Menara AirportGreat Britain CentralTehran Imam Khomeini Airport, Moscow Sheremetyevo AirportShanghai Pudong AirportKraków AirportFukuoka City & AirportFort Lauderdale Airport, Chongqing City & AirportManila AirportSantiago Airport, the Frankfurt City PackKey West Airportthe Okavango DeltaBali AirportLondon Oxford AirportBerlin Brandenburg Airport, the CRJ 550/700, the PA-28R Arrow IIIKristiansand Airport, Macau City & AirportBonaire Flamingo AirportMilano Linate Airport, the Singapore City PackTokyo Narita AirportYao Airport, the F-15 Eagle, the Paris City PackGreater Moncton AirportTweed New Haven AirportSantorini AirportSydney AirportHelsinki-Vantaa AirportReggio Calabria Airport, Bastia Poretta AirportMunich Airport, Paris Orly AirportNewcastle International AirportSankt Johann AirfieldDublin International Airport, and Seoul City Wow. We also have a beta preview of Singapore Changi airport.

If you want to learn more about the game itself, you can read our review which will tell you everything you need to know about Asobo Studio’s game.

Microsoft Flight Simulator is already available for Windows 10 and Steam, and Xbox Series X|S.


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Author
Giuseppe Nelva
Proud weeb hailing from sunny (not as much as people think) Italy and long-standing gamer since the age of Mattel Intellivision and Sinclair ZX Spectrum. Definitely a multi-platform gamer, he still holds the old dear PC nearest to his heart, while not disregarding any console on the market. RPGs (of any nationality), MMORPGs, and visual novels are his daily bread, but he enjoys almost every other genre, prominently racing simulators, action and sandbox games. He is also one of the few surviving fans on Earth of the flight simulator genre.