FSOne review from a newbie
#1
Junior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: South Jordan, UT
Posts: 2
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
FSOne review from a newbie
Background:
I have been flying a Firebird Freedom for about six months (first plane, never flown before that), and I have never owned a sim (only spent a few hours on a a buddies' G2 and a little time at the LHS). I was given a Typhoon 3D for my birthday, but am scared to death to fly it, so I went to the LHS to purchase a sim to get some "stick time" in before I took my Ty3D for its maiden flight. At my LHS, I looked at G3 and was ready to buy it, when the owner told me about a new product he just got called FSOne. After looking at them both, he told me that he would sell the FSOne to me at a $30 discount, because it was going on sale soon (to help spur interest in the new product). After noticing that FSOne had many planes from the same company as my planes, I bought it. My computer is a 2.8GHz P4, 4 GB RAM, Radeon 9800 w/ 128 MB running WinXP MCE 2005.
Reactions:
Out of the box, I had no problems installing the product. I think it would have been nicer to put the product on 1 DVD instead of 4 CDs. Anyone who is going to have the requirements to run this sim is going to have a DVD drive, or can spring for the $10 to get one. This may help with the install times, as you won't have to worry about disc swapping, and maybe not have to compress install files so much. Anyway, it took about 45 minutes to install. I followed the instructions on the card for setting up the TacCon controller which was a piece of cake.
I first started off with a little freestyle with the AeroBird Extreme, as this was the plane that closely resembled my Freedom. It felt very much the same, and flew very much the same. The only thing is that I can never hand launch that smoothly in my life, and the plane goes almost strait in the air, which, if I did that in real life, it would crash just as fast.
I then moved to the training. I thought the beginning lessons were great, but I would like to have been able to jump to practicing the moves right away, set up with the same equipment as the instructor. Instead, I had to back out, set it up manually, and then practice. I did find, however, that I was able to handle the trainer aircraft really easily after a few tries, and could take off, perform turns, and land sucessfully. The landing lessons were the best. I was even able to do torque rolls fairly smoothly after only an hour! I was looking through the advanced lessons, and noticed there was nothing about hovering. That is a shame, as I know that it a basic 3D maneuver.
I like the graphics very much. Of course, I have a 5 foot screen with my projector, so it felt VERY life like. I even stand up and move around a little, just like when I fly my real plane. I didn't think, however, that they were no better (or worse) than what I saw with G3 at the LHS. I think, perhaps, this may be a limit of OS / Graphics availabilty with today's machines, and I assume this will improve quickly.
It seems that the only things that break when you crash are the propeller and wings. The wheels, fuselage, and tail alway remain in tact, which I'm sure is not the case in real life. Maybe some work can be done in this area, but I guess a crash is a crash.
Overall, I really liked the experience with FSOne, and I am really glade I purchased it. It has given me a lot more confidence to fly my Ty3D soon. I wish there was a Ty3D model in the sim, so there is my feature request. It is a really popular plane, also made by Horrizon, so it should be in there.
Thanks for putting out a really great product right out of the gate! I have been reading the threads here about FSOne, and it seems the developers are really intent on helping as quickly as possible. If there are any questions you want to ask me, from my newbie prospective, please feel free to ask!
Thanks,
MacBoyRules in SLC
(Yes, bummed that I have to have a PC to run this. I guess if you made everything available on the Mac, who would buy PC's anymore?
I have been flying a Firebird Freedom for about six months (first plane, never flown before that), and I have never owned a sim (only spent a few hours on a a buddies' G2 and a little time at the LHS). I was given a Typhoon 3D for my birthday, but am scared to death to fly it, so I went to the LHS to purchase a sim to get some "stick time" in before I took my Ty3D for its maiden flight. At my LHS, I looked at G3 and was ready to buy it, when the owner told me about a new product he just got called FSOne. After looking at them both, he told me that he would sell the FSOne to me at a $30 discount, because it was going on sale soon (to help spur interest in the new product). After noticing that FSOne had many planes from the same company as my planes, I bought it. My computer is a 2.8GHz P4, 4 GB RAM, Radeon 9800 w/ 128 MB running WinXP MCE 2005.
Reactions:
Out of the box, I had no problems installing the product. I think it would have been nicer to put the product on 1 DVD instead of 4 CDs. Anyone who is going to have the requirements to run this sim is going to have a DVD drive, or can spring for the $10 to get one. This may help with the install times, as you won't have to worry about disc swapping, and maybe not have to compress install files so much. Anyway, it took about 45 minutes to install. I followed the instructions on the card for setting up the TacCon controller which was a piece of cake.
I first started off with a little freestyle with the AeroBird Extreme, as this was the plane that closely resembled my Freedom. It felt very much the same, and flew very much the same. The only thing is that I can never hand launch that smoothly in my life, and the plane goes almost strait in the air, which, if I did that in real life, it would crash just as fast.
I then moved to the training. I thought the beginning lessons were great, but I would like to have been able to jump to practicing the moves right away, set up with the same equipment as the instructor. Instead, I had to back out, set it up manually, and then practice. I did find, however, that I was able to handle the trainer aircraft really easily after a few tries, and could take off, perform turns, and land sucessfully. The landing lessons were the best. I was even able to do torque rolls fairly smoothly after only an hour! I was looking through the advanced lessons, and noticed there was nothing about hovering. That is a shame, as I know that it a basic 3D maneuver.
I like the graphics very much. Of course, I have a 5 foot screen with my projector, so it felt VERY life like. I even stand up and move around a little, just like when I fly my real plane. I didn't think, however, that they were no better (or worse) than what I saw with G3 at the LHS. I think, perhaps, this may be a limit of OS / Graphics availabilty with today's machines, and I assume this will improve quickly.
It seems that the only things that break when you crash are the propeller and wings. The wheels, fuselage, and tail alway remain in tact, which I'm sure is not the case in real life. Maybe some work can be done in this area, but I guess a crash is a crash.
Overall, I really liked the experience with FSOne, and I am really glade I purchased it. It has given me a lot more confidence to fly my Ty3D soon. I wish there was a Ty3D model in the sim, so there is my feature request. It is a really popular plane, also made by Horrizon, so it should be in there.
Thanks for putting out a really great product right out of the gate! I have been reading the threads here about FSOne, and it seems the developers are really intent on helping as quickly as possible. If there are any questions you want to ask me, from my newbie prospective, please feel free to ask!
Thanks,
MacBoyRules in SLC
(Yes, bummed that I have to have a PC to run this. I guess if you made everything available on the Mac, who would buy PC's anymore?
#2
My Feedback: (5)
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: California
Posts: 3,943
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
RE: FSOne review from a newbie
Nice review Macboy! I hope your maiden with your TY3D goes terrific and that you learn a lot through your sim! FSone is a great product. I agree completely about the DVD.
50%
50%
#3
RE: FSOne review from a newbie
Good write up. I disagree about the DVD. Although I would like for the sim to be on 1 DVD, the fact is most users do not have DVD drives. Only in the last couple years have DVD drives been cheap enough to be included in low end computers. The bleeding edge computer games are just now being released in 2 versions, DVD and CD-ROM, and there is a reason why they are still offering the CD-ROM version. Given the price of the sim, H9 should have just included the DVD and CD-ROMs in the box.
#4
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Plainfield, IL
Posts: 886
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
RE: FSOne review from a newbie
I haven't seen games being offered in both CD and DVD. I had to get a new DVD drive for RD3 when it came out. Also built a new PC too. I think all games should be on DVD. If a person can afford to be in this hobby, then they can get like he said, a $20 DVD drive.
#5
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Bloomington,
IL
Posts: 109
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
RE: FSOne review from a newbie
I've seen several newer games coming out on both DVD and CD-ROM. I had to swap my DVD drive around to my gaming computer so I could install Oblivion. I've never seen a point in installing one in my main machine cause I bought the DVD drive so I could watch movies on one PC while I was gaming on another. Having it in my gaming machine is pointless
#6
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Urbana, IL
Posts: 201
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
RE: FSOne review from a newbie
Given the size of the FS One installation, we actually considered using a single DVD instead of four CDROMs.
In the end, we decided that although many customers would have a DVD drive, some would actually have a capable machine but lack a DVD drive. Believe it or not we've seen a number of PCs so equipped.
I know it's a long install time, but it is about 4GB worth of data. Hopefully, it was worth the wait during installing.
In the end, we decided that although many customers would have a DVD drive, some would actually have a capable machine but lack a DVD drive. Believe it or not we've seen a number of PCs so equipped.
I know it's a long install time, but it is about 4GB worth of data. Hopefully, it was worth the wait during installing.
#7
Junior Member
My Feedback: (5)
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: East. Bernstadt,
KY
Posts: 13
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
RE: FSOne review from a newbie
I personally think anyone with a capable machine to properly run any new simulator would have a DVD, I have had one on my systems since 1999 and they are now just about as cheap as a normal CD rom infact last computer show I went to I couldn't find a new CD-rom (just cd-rom not meaning CD writer those were still available) They did have DVD roms for 15-20 dollars though.
Tim
Tim
#8
Member
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: St. CAtharines, ON, CANADA
Posts: 52
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
RE: FSOne review from a newbie
I did find it nostalgic having to continually swap disks during install. reminded me of the good old days installing games on my 386. it was not uncommon for large games to ship on 10-12 5 & 1/14" floppys. thouse were like 1-2 hr installs and the games were only 20 megs tops. oh how far we've come. I do agree a dvd included would have been nicer. but whats the big deal, once you install you never need the disks again anyways.