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Luxembourg photoreal from ScenerySoft

ss_lux_cover_200pScenerySoft have released their photoreal scenery for the city of Luxembourg.

The full press release can be found by clicking “Read more” at the end of this article, but the scenery’s highlights include both building and foliage autogen, edge blending with default textures, five season texturing and lit roads at night. Full details can be found at the ScenerySoft website.

Full Press release text:

Luxembourg City Photoreal is a photoscenery add-on for Microsoft Flight Simulator X. It will add a photorealistic area of 110km² in 1 meter per pixel resolution that will cover the whole city as well as the airport on the northeast.

Luxembourg City Photoreal adapts to seasonal changes, whether it’s spring, summer, fall, winter or hard winter (snow coverage). During the night you will see illumination on streets and highways as well as darker areas in forest and fields where no light is cast.

Also featured is full autogen coverage for the photoreal area with trees and buildings which users can disable if they prefer in the FSX settings.

Great care was taken in making sure that the transition from the photorealistic ground to the default landclass ground is as seamless as possible, without hard borders and smooth feathering, as well as color tones.

FEATURES

  • 110km² of 1m resolution covering the whole Luxembourg City
  • Autogen with buildings and vegetation
  • Seamless blending with surrounding default terrain
  • Full seasonal textures including “hard winter” snow coverage
  • Full night lighting, see illuminated roads, highways and city area
  • Water mask for all rivers, streams and ponds
  • Native FSX product fully compiled with FSX-SP2 SDK

For information and purchase visit www.scenerysoft.com

0 Responses

  1. The card you have to fill out just to be authorized to spend your money includes your daytime phone! Why not also your religion or sexual preferencies?

  2. That’s a requirement of almost all distance selling systems, Felidae. So they can contact you if there’s a problem.

    In many countries it is the law that they ask for that (including here in the UK). If you don’t like it, don’t buy from there, but you’ll find few places you can buy from without providing a contact number.

  3. Hi, maybe you’re right but I’ve bought hundreds of add-ons (about 70 by Simmarket) and never get an only one call.
    And I don’t like these enquiries.

  4. It’s really hit and miss as to whether they do or not – any UK-based company, as I said before, is required to have a contact telephone number. Clearly Germany doesn’t (although simMarket has my telephone number anyway, I think… If they don’t, they should have! ;))

    Steam is an excellent example – some people who sell through Steam require a telephone number, others don’t.

    99.9% of the time, no-one will call you anyway. I think I’ve had one phone call from a company – to say that their system was wrong and that they didn’t have the product I had ordered – in all the years I’ve been ordering over the internet. I’ve certainly never been called by a software developer or distributor.

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