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Minetest fly
Minetest fly






minetest fly
  1. #Minetest fly 720p
  2. #Minetest fly code

DXX Rebirth, based on Descent 1995, this game is not a flight simulator. Oolite open world space sim, based on Elite 1985.

#Minetest fly code

The Freespace 2 source code project, based on Freespace 2. Here are some open source flight combat simulators that I plan to test out myself.

minetest fly

I usually play MS-DOS games on the Raspberry Pi computer using the DOSBox emulator. Supposedly you, bbosen, are the developer of Linux Air Combat Simulator. I can see Linux Air Combat Flight Simulator was updated recently. A number of these Linux games will either not compile on ARM computers, or were not updated in years. I would compile some of these Linux games. Any time I search for Linux freeware games, I find Scorched 3D, Hedgewars, Tux Racer, Glest, etc. Nice to see people contribute to the gaming section of the Raspberry Pi forums. I was searching for a freeware Linux game to run on the Raspberry Pi computer. I'll test the game out when I have the opportunity. Here's a link to a YouTube clip showing what it looks like:Īnd HERE's a link to a YouTube video clip showing EXACTLY how I downloaded, compiled, installed, and ran it on my Pi:

#Minetest fly 720p

I have the 4GB Raspberry Pi model 4b, and I run it on a 720P HDMI TV. For the past few days I have been using it to show off the surprising performance of my Raspberry Pi with dynamic, high-speed, graphically intense, online combat demonstrations that anybody can appreciate. I don't know if any other combat flight simulators are well behaved on the Raspberry Pi, but Linux Air Combat runs very very well. The graphic detail is similar to flight sims from the "classic" period, like Microsoft Combat Flight Simulator 2, or "Warbirds" or "Aces High I". Also, the "old-school" graphics are a lot less complex than those seen on the latest Windows flight simulators. That's one reason why it runs so well on the Pi, I suppose. Linux Air Combat is a combat flight simulator written specifically for LINUX, so there is no need for emulation of Windows. But I was wrong! The Pi4b runs LAC very sweetly! I really didn't expect Linux Air Combat ("LAC") to perform well on this tiny, inexpensive machine. I needed only an hour or so to get the Pi up and running Raspbian and connected to my TV via HDMI. About 3 years ago I tried it on the Pi 2 and although compiling and installing was easy, run-time performance was impossibly slow.īut the Pi4b is a different beastie! I bought one a few days ago, with NOOBS pre-loaded on a 32GB flash chip. For years I have been advising people NOT to try my "Linux Air Combat" flight simulator on the Raspberry Pi.








Minetest fly