Jetfighter (series)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jetfighter_(series) an entity of type: WikicatDOSGames

Jetfighter is a series of 3D combat flight simulation computer games that was developed by starting in 1988. The player would fly a combat jet aircraft in the skies against enemy forces. The game boasted 3D graphics that were cutting-edge at the time of the game's release, and used real-world terrain. The games seldom sold well because they occupied an uncomfortable middle ground of game design - too much flight simulator for action game fans, as they realistically emulated actual combat aircraft, but too simplistic for the hardcore sim fans, who always preferred games more along the lines of the Falcon series. The series ended after the commercial failure of Jetfighter 2015. The later games had support for 3dfx Voodoo cards to run natively in DOS. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Jetfighter (series)
rdf:langString The Jetfighter series
xsd:integer 5213152
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rdf:langString
rdf:langString James H. Dargie
rdf:langString Logo used for Jetfighter 2015.
rdf:langString -group/jetfighter-series
rdf:langString Velocity Development, Mission Studios, Interplay, TalonSoft, Global Star Software
rdf:langString Jetfighter
rdf:langString Jetfighter is a series of 3D combat flight simulation computer games that was developed by starting in 1988. The player would fly a combat jet aircraft in the skies against enemy forces. The game boasted 3D graphics that were cutting-edge at the time of the game's release, and used real-world terrain. The games seldom sold well because they occupied an uncomfortable middle ground of game design - too much flight simulator for action game fans, as they realistically emulated actual combat aircraft, but too simplistic for the hardcore sim fans, who always preferred games more along the lines of the Falcon series. The series ended after the commercial failure of Jetfighter 2015. The later games had support for 3dfx Voodoo cards to run natively in DOS. Jetfighter II was produced before the winner of the Advanced Tactical Fighter competition was announced; the programmers chose to emulate the YF-23 "Black Widow II" as the winning aircraft rather than the eventual winner, the YF-22 (which "entered service" in 2004 as the F-22 Raptor).
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 12141

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