Compara los precios de IL-2 Sturmovik: Battle of Normandy en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por 1C Game Studios. Publicado por FOR-GAMES CR LTD. Lanzado el 29/9/2022. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Action, Simulation.

If you own a HOTAS and can name every aircraft in the D-Day sky, this late-war sim module has your number. Casuals need not apply.

I'll be straight with you: this is not a game you just boot up on a Tuesday night. Battle of Normandy is a serious WWII combat flight sim module sitting inside the IL-2 Sturmovik: Great Battles ecosystem, and it expects you to know the difference between a P-51B and a P-47D Razorback before you even touch the runway. The aircraft roster covers both sides of the Channel war convincingly, with Allied iron including the Typhoon Mk.Ib (rockets loaded, low-level murder machine), the Mosquito F.B. Mk.VI, the Spitfire Mk.XIV, and the P-51B/C, while the Luftwaffe side gives you the Fw 190 A-6, Bf 109 G-6 Late, and the jet-powered Ar 234. The map spans Normandy's northern coast, southern England, and the Calais region, and the developers built two variants of it, one pre-invasion and one post-invasion, which is a nice touch that makes the battlespace feel like it actually evolved. Flight model and damage modelling are where the series has always punched hard, and Normandy keeps that reputation mostly intact. The Digital Warfare Engine gets a rendering bump here compared to earlier modules, though community feedback makes it clear the visuals still trail DCS and War Thunder in environmental polish, particularly over the Channel. If the sea looks flat and the trees look like cardboard cutouts at low altitude, that is the honest picture. On the flip side, cockpit accuracy and systems depth are things the IL-2 team genuinely cares about, and you feel it when you are fighting a stalling Fw 190 at 5,000 feet with a Spitfire on your six. For multiplayer, the module supports both Dogfight and Co-op server formats. You can run community-hosted dedicated servers, and virtual squadrons are active in this niche. If you came here hoping for a polished matchmaking lobby with skill-based ranking and a smooth first-session experience, forget it. This community works through Discord, forum threads, and scheduled events. The barrier is real but the payoff, flying coordinated missions with serious sim pilots over actual D-Day terrain, is the whole point for a certain type of player. The Quick Mission Builder (QMB) and the newer Advanced Quick Mission Generator (AQMG) at least let you get airborne fast for practice and solo sparring. The single-player career mode is where honest criticism is warranted. Community members have consistently flagged repetitive mission structures, especially on the Luftwaffe side, where ground-attack runs at the Allied beachhead through walls of Spitfires become the entire mid-campaign loop. The long transit times across the Channel with limited time-compression compound this. The career mode feels like an afterthought bolted onto infrastructure built for multiplayer, and players who bought this primarily for solo content have noted the disappointment. Scripted community-made campaigns, like the Overlord P-51B campaign, do considerably better work here and are worth tracking down separately. One critical practical note: on Steam, this module requires Battle of Stalingrad as a base purchase, which adds to your entry cost if you are not already in the Great Battles ecosystem. Standalone purchase is available through the official IL-2 site. Factor that in before you pull the trigger. This is a module for dedicated sim pilots who already own a HOTAS setup, who read campaign forums between sessions, and who understand that transit time is part of the experience, not a bug. Fred, Scout Team

IL-2 Sturmovik: Battle of Normandy

IL-2 Sturmovik: Battle of Normandy

29 sept 20221C Game StudiosFOR-GAMES CR LTD
GamerScout opina

If you own a HOTAS and can name every aircraft in the D-Day sky, this late-war sim module has your number. Casuals need not apply.

PC
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Acerca de IL-2 Sturmovik: Battle of Normandy

I'll be straight with you: this is not a game you just boot up on a Tuesday night. Battle of Normandy is a serious WWII combat flight sim module sitting inside the IL-2 Sturmovik: Great Battles ecosystem, and it expects you to know the difference between a P-51B and a P-47D Razorback before you even touch the runway. The aircraft roster covers both sides of the Channel war convincingly, with Allied iron including the Typhoon Mk.Ib (rockets loaded, low-level murder machine), the Mosquito F.B. Mk.VI, the Spitfire Mk.XIV, and the P-51B/C, while the Luftwaffe side gives you the Fw 190 A-6, Bf 109 G-6 Late, and the jet-powered Ar 234. The map spans Normandy's northern coast, southern England, and the Calais region, and the developers built two variants of it, one pre-invasion and one post-invasion, which is a nice touch that makes the battlespace feel like it actually evolved. Flight model and damage modelling are where the series has always punched hard, and Normandy keeps that reputation mostly intact. The Digital Warfare Engine gets a rendering bump here compared to earlier modules, though community feedback makes it clear the visuals still trail DCS and War Thunder in environmental polish, particularly over the Channel. If the sea looks flat and the trees look like cardboard cutouts at low altitude, that is the honest picture. On the flip side, cockpit accuracy and systems depth are things the IL-2 team genuinely cares about, and you feel it when you are fighting a stalling Fw 190 at 5,000 feet with a Spitfire on your six. For multiplayer, the module supports both Dogfight and Co-op server formats. You can run community-hosted dedicated servers, and virtual squadrons are active in this niche. If you came here hoping for a polished matchmaking lobby with skill-based ranking and a smooth first-session experience, forget it. This community works through Discord, forum threads, and scheduled events. The barrier is real but the payoff, flying coordinated missions with serious sim pilots over actual D-Day terrain, is the whole point for a certain type of player. The Quick Mission Builder (QMB) and the newer Advanced Quick Mission Generator (AQMG) at least let you get airborne fast for practice and solo sparring. The single-player career mode is where honest criticism is warranted. Community members have consistently flagged repetitive mission structures, especially on the Luftwaffe side, where ground-attack runs at the Allied beachhead through walls of Spitfires become the entire mid-campaign loop. The long transit times across the Channel with limited time-compression compound this. The career mode feels like an afterthought bolted onto infrastructure built for multiplayer, and players who bought this primarily for solo content have noted the disappointment. Scripted community-made campaigns, like the Overlord P-51B campaign, do considerably better work here and are worth tracking down separately. One critical practical note: on Steam, this module requires Battle of Stalingrad as a base purchase, which adds to your entry cost if you are not already in the Great Battles ecosystem. Standalone purchase is available through the official IL-2 site. Factor that in before you pull the trigger. This is a module for dedicated sim pilots who already own a HOTAS setup, who read campaign forums between sessions, and who understand that transit time is part of the experience, not a bug.

Fred
Fred · Scout Team

Shooters

Etiquetas

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvpcooponline-cooptier:indieHOTAS-RequiredFlight Model DepthDedicated Server MultiplayerVirtual SquadronsD-Day TheaterCareer ModeAdvanced Quick Mission GeneratorCommunity CampaignsTwo-Sided Conflict

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
64-bit Windows® 7 (SP1) / Windows® 8 / Windows® 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
70 GB available space
Graphics
4GB VRAM or better
Processor
Intel® Core™ i5/i7 3 GHz

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
1C Game Studios
Distribuidora
FOR-GAMES CR LTD
Fecha de lanzamiento
29 sept 2022

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible IL-2 Sturmovik: Battle of Normandy?

IL-2 Sturmovik: Battle of Normandy está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó IL-2 Sturmovik: Battle of Normandy?

IL-2 Sturmovik: Battle of Normandy se lanzó el 29 de septiembre de 2022.

¿Quién desarrolló IL-2 Sturmovik: Battle of Normandy?

IL-2 Sturmovik: Battle of Normandy fue desarrollado por 1C Game Studios y publicado por FOR-GAMES CR LTD.