This wasn't scripted dialogue. CAP2 ’s AI uses a dynamic threat evaluator. Gremlin had calculated that the Su-35s had a 200-meter altitude advantage and a 40-knot speed surplus. The only equalizer was the terrain mask below—a chain of jungle-covered volcanic peaks.
Informative Detail 3: The Missile Simulation Unlike other games where missiles are magic bullets, CAP2 treats each missile as a glider with a rocket booster. Eva watched the data-tag of her AMRAAM: Pitbull (internal radar active). The enemy Flanker dumped chaff and executed a "notch" – flying perpendicular to the missile’s Doppler radar. The missile’s probability of kill dropped from 92% to 34% in three seconds.
The Su-35’s symbol fractured into a debris cone. No explosion, no Michael Bay fireball. CAP2 informed her, via a post-impact text log: Aircraft structural failure. Pilot ejection detected. Combat Air Patrol 2 Military Flight Simulator v...
At Angels 20 (20,000 feet), the radar warning receiver (RWR) bloomed with a new contact: "SA-10 Gargoyle." A surface-to-air threat from a disputed island.
“Striker, Pincer Lead. Bandits, 110 for 40. Hot.” This wasn't scripted dialogue
As she hit the "Start" button, the physics engine snapped to life.
The clock read 0447 Zulu, but inside the dimly lit cockpit of an F/A-18E Super Hornet, time had lost its linear grip. For Captain Eva "Striker" Rostova, a veteran with 1,200 simulated flight hours and 30 real-world combat missions, the world had narrowed to the glowing green-and-amber displays of Combat Air Patrol 2 (CAP2) . The only equalizer was the terrain mask below—a
Eva was not at an air force base. She was in a reinforced garage in suburban Ohio, a $12,000 rig of force-feedback pedals, a replica Thrustmaster stick, and a 360-degree wrap-around OLED screen. Her mission tonight was the "informative" part—a beta test for the new Dynamic Campaign Engine.