Aircrafts | Fs2004 - Carenado
Other aircraft. Ghosts of the default Learjet 45. A static Boeing 737-400 with no landing gear. And in the middle of the taxiway, a Carenado Piper Seneca—his own livery—with the cockpit door open.
The boy smiled and pushed the throttle forward. The Carenado Piper Seneca rolled toward the green polygon runway, lifted off, and dissolved into a shower of pixelated stars.
He tried to pause, but the keyboard was dead. The yoke in his hand felt warm. The roar of the virtual Lycoming engine seemed to sync perfectly with the sound of his own blood in his ears. The countdown hit zero. FS2004 - Carenado Aircrafts
"Keep flying, kid," Alex said.
It went real .
In the world of Microsoft Flight Simulator 2004: A Century of Flight, the default aircraft were blocky, their textures smeared like wet watercolors. But Alex had discovered Carenado.
"Neither is she," the boy said, patting the Carenado panel. "But she's beautiful. Don't you remember the first time you saw a real screw head modeled in a simulator? Don't you remember thinking that if you just zoomed in close enough, you could climb into the screen and fly away forever?" Other aircraft
Alex reached out. Their hands didn't touch, but for a moment, the code between them hummed.