If you access any standard aircraft and in the pilots seat you look for the icon with a TICK on it this is the KNEE PAD click in there and you will see a number of ICONS on will show KEYs click on that and this will show you all the control functions of all the keys
No. On Flight Simulator, you fly planes, which is why it is called Flight Simulator, and has planes on the cover.
Yes, you can fly to Auckland airport in Microsoft Flight Simulator X.
Yes and no, it doesn't come with Microsoft Flight Simulator X, but you can find the add-on from Microsoft Flight Simulator X add-on websites.
No, the point of Microsoft Flight Simulator X is to learn how to fly planes. So you do not need to know how to fly from the start.
You can with Google Earth Flight Simulator. I'm not sure about Microsoft, but check the key bindings.
Flight Simulator is a simulator for people who like to fly airplanes, helicopters, and all around air vehicles. it is very professional and some-what confusing to new people that are playing the game.
Err... Flight Simulator X
they are in the missions tab
Press Ctrl+Alt+A (Command + Option + A on Mac) or go to the Tools menu and click "Enter Flight Simulator".Help is provide by a web link on the opened tab. See also URL in related link below for detailed instructions on how to fly and land the airplane.Google Earth versions 4.2 and higher have a built-in Flight Simulator that you can fly around the world.
no it does not, ultimate traffic simply gives you selected airlines to fly alone with at airports to increase the realism of flight sim
Start the flight simulator by pressing CTRL + Alt + A or selecting 'Enter Flight Simulator' from the Tools menu. To take off, first press the Page Up key to increase thrust and move the aircraft down the runway. Further instructions to fly your airplane can be found in the related links below.
There is a "Planet Button". Click that before starting the Flight Simulator then select the start position as the Current View when you pick your aircraft. This allow you to fly on the Moon or Mars in addition to Earth.