Mallard Software and BAO released the Sound, Graphics, and Aircraft Upgrade (SGA), which added digital and synth sound capability (on compatible hardware) to FS4. ASD provided additional aircraft including a Boeing 747 with a custom dash/cockpit (which required running in 640 × 350 resolution). Also, with the provided Aircraft Designer Module, the user could select one of two basic type aircraft frames (prop or jet) and customize flight envelope details and visual aspects. This allowed FS4 users to build custom scenery units known as SC1 files which could be used within FS4 and traded with other users. First from Microsoft & the Bruce Artwick Organization (BAO) came the Aircraft and Scenery Designer (ASD) integration module. Like FS3, this version included an upgraded converter for the old Sublogic Scenery Disks into SCN files.Ī large series of add-on products were produced for FS4 between 19.
The basic version of FS4 was available for Macintosh computers in 1991. These included improved aircraft models, random weather patterns, a new sailplane, and dynamic scenery (non-interactive air and ground traffic on and near airports moving along static prerecorded paths). Version 4 followed in 1989, and brought several improvements over Flight Simulator 3. Allowed users to design their own aircraft. Sublogic flight simulators First generation (Apple II and TRS-80) įS 4.0 – Now with dynamic scenery, more detailed roads, bridges, and buildings. 4 Products based on the Flight Simulator X codebase.2.12.2 Flight Simulator X: Steam Edition (Dovetail Games).2.12.1 Flight Simulator X: Acceleration.2.11 Flight Simulator 2004: A Century of Flight.1.3 Third generation (Amiga, Atari ST, and Macintosh).1.2 Second generation (Tandy Color Computer 3, Apple II, Commodore 64, and Atari 8-bit).1.1 First generation (Apple II and TRS-80).