parsifal
Colonel
I think I see where Ratsels 109 obsession comes from , I also play Il2 online, it's good fun but should be taken with a huge dose of salt as to flight models and especially damage modelling!
It's actually easier to ID a real plane than it is in the game due to pixelation, however, sitting in your house with a beer one side and a bag of crisps the other battling your mates creates zero fear or anxiety, I can easily see how a blue on blue could happen, whilst i was an aircraft recognition instructor in the army I had to mark numerous exams where people mistook such diverse aircraft as a Foxbat and a Tomcat, I can only sympathise with the guys who had to do it whilst flying an aircraft with not exactly brilliant visibility, holding station with your wingman, the gnawing anxiety of watching your tail and thats wthout G force throwing you about inside the plane!
I often am thankfull I was not one of that generation!
To be fair, Simulations are how battle plans and tactics training are worked out in peacetime....how to react to a given situation. A simulation is only as good as the variables put into it, and the trouble is, there are so many 14 YOs brought up on the myths of german invincibility that if game designers tried to put in realism based on historical known constants, the game would be branded as "unrealistic" and would fail commercially.
Years ago, I had a friend who would participate every year in sand table exercises at Australias national wargaming conventions. Sort of similar to the US "Origins" expo held every four years or so (I think). Bit like the Olympics of wargaming. Basically you get points to "buy" your army. Combat rules were pretty realistic. All the young turks went for the classy armies...Israeli, US, West German that kind of thing. They had every imaginable piece of upmarket technology you could think of...MICVs, SPGs, Modern top class armour like Leopard IIs you name it.....at about company strength. My friend, a seasoned pro at this type of thing, "bought" a Royal Omani army, slightly older, less well equip0ped troops, riding around in Landrovers and Leopard Is. All the 14YOs laughed at him....until they realized that he could afford to "buy" a full regiment of this stuff, have some off board artillery support and nearly a full squadron of Jaguar FBs to support him.
Competition started, and army after army of these snotty little know it alls gets their butts kicked. The 14 YOs get cheesed off and start to pack up and leave. To save their competition, the organisers changed the rules mid competition and outlawed my friends Omanis from the competition. Thats the sort of mentality you are dealing with in the commercially available sim world, and I expect computer comps are just the same. Its a common and often occurring problem....dont let a few known realities get in the way of a good fantasy.
It doesnt happen when you are using simulation to train for a purpose within the military, which is where I learnt a lot of this stuff....you are looking for the most realistic and accurate representation that you can, so that you can test untried theories and ideas, without getting anyone killed. Places like Sandhurst, Duntroon and Wst Point use this stuff all the time