Below are user reviews of Israeli Air Force and on the right are links to professionally written reviews.
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User Reviews (11 - 12 of 12)
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dissappointing
3
Rating: 3,
Useful: 0 / 0
Date: October 31, 2003
Author: Amazon User
This is a mini-survey sim based upon a partial history of the Israeli Air Force. Unlike its famous namesake, Jane's IAF is actually a light-weight survey simulator (allowing you to fly a range of aircraft rather than focusing on any one of them, like "Jane's Longbow", "F/A-18" or "F-15"). It's pretty tame stuff, with simple missions and fairly generic flight models. Graphics and gameplay fall somewhere between the earlier Fighters titles ("ATF" and "USNF '97") and the superlative "WWII Fighters", though the sophistication falls closer to the old games than the new. Terrain modeling is pretty lackluster - as you'd expect, terrain becomes more pixilated and less attractive the closer (lower) you fly, something flight-simmers like me have had to deal with since the days of "EF2000" (an older game with dramatically lower system demands). On my WinXP machine, the program was unresponsive and buggy - and that was on the menus!. In fact, just flying IAF reminds me of the experience I have when I get a new computer and I dust off some old games that proved too demanding for my older computer, but are clearly out-stripped by the power of the new one. Between the bugginess of the menus and the lackluster flight model, IAF looks like a product hurried out the door.
Starting no earlier than the "Six-Day War" (1967), "IAF" skips much historical ground. Admittedly, it's a bit much to expect a sim to cover everything from the pre-jet combat (of the sort that typified the "Independence War" of 1948) to the era of cutting edge-technology that developed the "Lavi". (Maybe they could have done a series, but who would want to buy a game in which all you fly were gun-armed Piper-Cubs and Dakotas, and which the only real fighter was the horrendous Avia S-199? On the other hand, they could have had an edition that started with those early days and culminated in the Sinai war of '59, with its Mysteres, Vampires and Venoms, an aspect of military aviation history overlooked by flight sims.) However, the sim also overlooks much of the IAF in its choice of aircraft - no Mystere, Vautour or Ouragan. You get to fly the Mirage-III, though it's the only flyable plane offered for the watershed '67 war. You get 2 different models of the Phantom (a legend of a fighter also overlooked by many sims) yet not a single Skyhawk, which was the IAF's workhorse in the Yom Kippur war (1973). You get the Kfir (an Israeli built, unlicensed copy of the French Mirage, yet powered by the General Electric J-79 engine), F-16D, F-15 and even tosses in the Lavi. For multi-player, you can fly either the MiG-29 or the MiG-23. The older, more ubiquitous MiG-21 is strangely unavailable (that's like a WWII game without Spitfires or Mustangs), as is the Su-7 - Soviet strike-fighter that roughly corresponds to Republic's F-105, and saw much action in 1973.
Everything about IAF's premise looks rushed, as if the idea of a game based on the IAF was enough to carry the game. It's not. By now, any system can fly this game. Those in the market for a survey sim but lack the horsepower to run "Lock-On" might consider "Jane's USAF" instead.
Israeli Air Force combat CD
5
Rating: 5,
Useful: 0 / 0
Date: December 18, 2006
Author: Amazon User
I bought the IAF combat CD several years ago and enjoyed it to the max! I had read books on the many wars Israel fought against her Arab neighbours so I knew how the IAF prosecuted the war against Arab air forces.
I enjoyed, for instance, the Six-Day War attack on the Inchas AFB in Egypt. Here's how I flew it: using the assigned IAF Mirage III CJ I flew in low under the radar until I was picked up at about 17 miles to target. There are two SAM batteries guarding the air force base, the first just east of runway 27 and the second just north of the air base. Coming from the east I took out the eastern SAM radar first with cannon fire (I ignored the SAMs themselves). Next I noted two MiG-21s on runway 27 ready for takeoff on CAP. I executed an Immelman above them and with one dive destroyed them with cannon fire (they were so close together on the runway that destroying one wiped out the other). Next I headed for northern radar installation and destroyed the center radar, again choosing not to waste precious ammo and bombs on the SAMs themselves. Once the SAM radars are destroyed you've bought yourself a little time.
Next I noted a line of four MiG-21s on a parking ramp midway along runway 9/27. I took those out with cannon fire. I also noted another 7 MiG-21s parked near the threshhold of runway 3. Again I gave them the "cannon treatment". The two Ilyushin cargo planes parked midway along runway 15/33 received similar attention.
I went after a MiG-21 returning to Inchas from CAP and also took out another Ilyushin cargo plane headed there as well. However, the objective of the mission to Inchas was to destroy the runways. This was accomplished by bombing the runway intersections. If time ran out the voice of Kol Israel news announcer Reuben David Miller would command the IAF to "get outta there".
As you can probably tell I thoroughly enjoyed the IAF combat CD and have been blown from the sky many times. One more thing. In either the historical or ficticious Arab-Israeli conflicts on the CD, don't let the Syrian MiG-29s get on your tail. They are hell to shake!
If you are an IAF fan get this CD!
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