The tradeoff is a reduction in complexity, more of a game feeling as opposed to the strict accuracy that DCS offers. To top it off, you can play multiplayer on any map provided there’s an aircraft you own present in the scenario. ![]() In contrast, a premium Great Battles title is $80, $50 if it’s the regular version, and unlocks one map for single player uses, plus comes with a career generator for the included aircraft. Finally, a campaign is an additional $10 on top of that. A DCS WWII aircraft costs $50 normally, then the asset pack + Normandy bundle is $60. It’s just that it’s not a whole lot of it, yet. ![]() I think that what DCS has got in the WW2 arena is very good.
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