March 4, 20233 yr I've invested time learning DCS' A-10C, Flysimware's Learjet 35 for P3D, and now MSFS' Longitude. All great planes. Love these planes but my fingers are having a hard time remembering the very different key bindings for each one. I may be forced to give up one of them but I'm having a hard time deciding which one to abandon ship. So many choices but so little time. An embarrassment of riches for flight simmers. Win 11 Pro, MSFS Deluxe, Quest 2.
March 5, 20233 yr Yes, you're the only one. Next. 😉 The World is divided into two groups. Those who say "Give me a link" and those that provide the link. WWG1WGA
March 5, 20233 yr DCS has always been the hardest for me...such complex aircraft and you have to remember what to do under pressure while trying to avoid being killed by the enemy. Quite a difference from a leisurely FMC programming session 🙂 Dave Current System (Running at 4k): ASUS ROG STRIX X670E-F, Ryzen 7800X3D, RTX 5090, 55" Samsung Q80T, 64GB DDR5 6000 RAM, EVGA CLC 280mm AIO Cooler, Brunner CLS-E NG Yoke, Thrustmaster Warthog HOTAS & Stick, Thrustmaster TCA Quadrant & Add-on, VirtualFly Ruddo+, TQ6+ and Yoko+, GoFlight MCP-PRO and EFIS, Skalarki FCU and MCDU
March 5, 20233 yr Author 3 hours ago, regis9 said: DCS has always been the hardest for me...such complex aircraft and you have to remember what to do under pressure while trying to avoid being killed by the enemy. Quite a difference from a leisurely FMC programming session 🙂 The sim manual for the DCS A-10C OpenBeta version is now at least 800 pages. Almost the same number of pages as the real-life manual for the Garmin G5000 on the Longitude. However, both are still not as voluminous as the Owner's and Navigation manual for the Honda CR-V SUV which has a combined total of almost 1000 pages. That's kind ironic considering computers are supposed to make life easier for all and not the other way around. Win 11 Pro, MSFS Deluxe, Quest 2.
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