Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024
A gorgeous but turbulent flight sim that launched rough and still has baggage. The ambition is real; so are the frame drops.
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About Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024
Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024 is Asobo Studio's follow-up to their landmark 2020 release, doubling down on photogrammetry-powered world recreation and adding a career mode that gives pilots structured progression beyond free flight. The premise is compelling: fly hundreds of aircraft across a living, breathing recreation of Earth, work through aviation career milestones, and do it all with friends via cross-platform multiplayer. On paper, that is one of the most feature-rich sim packages ever shipped. In practice, the launch was a mess that is still casting a shadow over the review score. As someone who tracks patch notes with the same energy most people save for sports scores, I will be direct about the state of the sim. The initial release in November 2024 hit players with streaming bottlenecks, missing liveries, career mode bugs, and performance problems that made the beautiful visuals feel mocking. Asobo has been patching steadily, and the experience today is meaningfully better than day one, but that 57% Steam rating reflects real frustration from real pilots who paid full price and got a broken runway. If you are evaluating this right now, check the most recent patch notes before committing. When it works, the depth is substantial. The aircraft roster is the largest the series has shipped, spanning everything from light single-engine trainers to heavies, with study-level options for players who want to manage fuel trim and cold-dark cockpit procedures by hand. Career mode adds licensing tiers, missions tied to real airports, and economic progression that gives every flight a reason beyond sightseeing. The multiplayer implementation lets you share airspace with friends or strangers in real time, which remains one of the few genuinely social experiences in the sim space. For a strategy-minded player, the career tree functions almost like a tech tree, where you sequence aircraft endorsements and mission types to unlock higher-paying contracts. That loop is legitimately engaging once the bugs stop interrupting it. The problems that remain are not trivial. AI traffic behavior is inconsistent, ground handling on certain aircraft still feels disconnected from the physics model, and the in-app purchase ecosystem for premium aircraft means the base game's roster, while large, is not the ceiling of what you will want. The tutorial structure has improved but still assumes a baseline familiarity with aviation concepts that genuine newcomers will not have. Third-party add-on support is growing but the modding ecosystem is not as mature here as it is in older sim platforms. Performance scaling on mid-range hardware remains a negotiation rather than a setting. Who should buy this? If you already have a HOTAS setup, a love of aviation, and patience for a sim that is still finding its cruising altitude, there is more here than almost anything else in the genre. If you are a complete newcomer who wants to learn what a VOR approach feels like, this can absolutely be your entry point, but budget time for external tutorials because the in-game guidance will not hold your hand through the hard parts. If you bounced off the 2020 version due to lack of structured goals, the career mode is a genuine reason to return. If you need a polished, stable experience on day one, the review score is telling you something you should hear. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Asobo Studio
- Publisher
- Xbox Game Studios
- Release Date
- Nov 19, 2024