Concorde Professional -

True to the real engineering feat, virtual pilots had to lower the aircraft's iconic nose by up to 13 degrees to see the runway during takeoffs and landings due to the aircraft's incredibly steep angle of attack.

Flipping the switches to ignite the four powerful Rolls-Royce/Snecma Olympus 593 turbojet afterburners was a rite of passage, pushing the digital airframe past the sound barrier to Mach 2.0. Concorde Professional

The cockpit was an intricate maze of high-resolution gauges, switches, and a fully interactive engineer's panel. There was no GPS; pilots had to master the ancient Inertial Navigation System (INS) to plot coordinates across the vast Atlantic Ocean. True to the real engineering feat, virtual pilots

While the actual aircraft retired from the skies in 2003, this highly detailed software package allowed aviation enthusiasts to take command of the delta-winged marvel right from their desktop setups. ✈️ The Pinnacle of Flight Simulation Nostalgia There was no GPS; pilots had to master

—the iconic flight simulation expansion originally developed by Phoenix Simulation Software (PSS) and published by Just Flight—stands as a masterclass in virtual aviation, resurrecting the legendary era of supersonic passenger travel.