Chuck Yeager's Advanced Flight Trainer for ZX Spectrum

ZX Spectrum

Simulation flight simulator aviation vector
number of games played: 136x last time: Mar 28, 2024, 04:37

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Click on the play ZX Spectrum game now button first to load the game, with the stop / start button you can pause the emulation.
The game is controlled using the keyboard or joystick, just like on an old computer.

Chuck Yeager's Advanced Flight Trainer

Online version of Chuck Yeager's Advanced Flight Trainer for ZX Spectrum. Chuck Yeager's Advanced Flight Trainer is a computer aircraft simulation game developed by Edward (Ned) Lerner and published by Electronic Arts in 1987. It was originally released as Chuck Yeager's Advanced Flight Simulator but due to a legal dispute with Microsoft over the term "Flight Simulator," the game was pulled from shelves and renamed. Chuck Yeager served as technical consultant for the game, where his likeness and voice were prominently used. The game allows a player to "test pilot" 14 different airplanes, including the Bell X-1, which Yeager had piloted to become the first man to exceed Mach 1. The game is embellished by Yeager's laconic commentary: When the user crashes one plane, Yeager remarks "You really screwed the pooch on that one," or other asides...

Game details

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Released in
1987
Publisher
Electronic Arts, Inc.
Developer
Lerner Research
Platforms
Apple II, Commodore 64, DOS (1987), Macintosh, PC-98 (1988), Amstrad CPC, MSX, ZX Spectrum (1989)
Chuck Yeager's Advanced Flight Trainer downloads & info

Other platforms online 2

You can play Chuck Yeager's Advanced Flight Trainer online also in a versions for

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Sinclair ZX Spectrum

Online emulated version of Chuck Yeager's Advanced Flight Trainer was originally developed for the ZX Spectrum an 8-bit personal home computer released in the United Kingdom in 1982 by Sinclair Research. Referred to during development as the ZX81 Colour and ZX82, it was launched as the ZX Spectrum by Sinclair to highlight the machine's colour display, compared with the black and white display of its predecessor, the ZX81. The Spectrum was released as eight different models, ranging from the entry level with 16 KB RAM released in 1982 to the ZX Spectrum +3 with 128 KB RAM and built in floppy disk drive in 1987.
The Spectrum is based on a Zilog Z80 A CPU running at 3.5 MHz (or NEC D780C-1 clone). The original model has 16 KB (16×1024 bytes) of ROM and either 16 KB or 48 KB of RAM. Hardware design was by Richard Altwasser of Sinclair Research, and the outward appearance was designed by Sinclair's industrial designer Rick Dickinson.
Video output is through an RF modulator and was designed for use with contemporary television sets, for a simple colour graphic display. Text can be displayed using 32×24 characters from the ZX Spectrum character set or from a set provided within an application, from a palette of 15 shades: seven colours at two levels of brightness each, plus black. The image resolution is 256×192 with the same colour limitations.

ZX Spectrum emulation powered by JSSpeccy JavaScript emulator
online game added: 2020-12-16, by dj