Airport Rush
Airport Rush is a Management, Adventure, and Single-player video game developed by Silver Games. Throughout the game, the player serves as a traffic controller whose main mission is to control the flow of air traffic and avoid accidents to have happened. When a plane is landing, the player has to click the icon on the screen to allow the landing.
More airplanes’ arrival will make the game more difficult for the player to prevent collisions. The huge airport is under the player’s control, and every plane is waiting for a green signal to land. The player can choose one terminal out of three terminals where every port has multiple landings / take off trips. The player must be careful in choosing the terminal as it is not as easy as it seems.
All a player has to do is don’t let the planes crash. The game has HD views of everything on the screen that lets the player feel conformable from a distance. The game’s core features are Management, Three Terminals, Skills, HD Graphics, and Simple Controls.
#1 Flight Simulator
Flight Simulator is an Adventure, Simulation, Flight, and Single-player video game series developed by Asobo Studios for multiple platforms. Throughout the games, the player finds himself in a cockpit where the mission is to explore the skies. While flying the planes, the player sees the environment from a third-person perspective.
All the installments offer simple-to-use programs, but some are highly complicated to approach. Most games include the world’s most popular aircraft, such as the Mooney Bravo, Beechcraft Baron 58, the Airbus A321, Boeing 737, the Robinson R22, the Air Scheffel 738, and many others. The player is not limited to use only the available planes; rather, he can purchase the planes.
AI traffic is another major aspect of all the games where it becomes possible to crash into traffic, leading to the session’s end. The player can interact with the traffic via the radio and ATC. Scenery usually involves airports with enhanced, more accurate detail and large expanses of ground for landing and taking off. Wide-area scenery may use detailed satellite photos that are also convenient.