A-10 Cuba!

Moby ID: 2300
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A-10 Cuba!, the sequel to A-10 Attack!, is a military air combat simulator featuring the Fairchild-Republic A-10 Thunderbolt II ground attack aircraft, otherwise known as the "Warthog." Like its predecessor, it is a highly realistic simulator with a 3D polygonal graphics engine. New features include more detailed graphics and 12 missions set in an expansive, intricate model of Cuba. Four additional multiplayer-only environments allow up to eight players to compete on a LAN.

The game provides a detailed 2D cockpit with clickable buttons and switches. A wide variety of weapons are available for air-air and air-ground combat, including Sidewinder, Hellfire, Maverick and HARM missiles and free-fall, laser-guided, and cluster bombs. Rockets and the Warthog's famous GAU-8 Avenger gatling gun round out the arsenal.

Physics, damage and avionics are simulated in great detail.

The Macintosh version also includes a mission editor.

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Credits (Windows version)

8 People

Pilot/Mission Cmdr.
Co-Pilot/Navigator
Nose Art/Camo Designer
Draftsman/Chief Air Mechanic
Chief Tactician
USO Sound Man
Base Cmdr. - Parsoft Design Bureau Chief
Wing Cmdr/Activision P.O.W.

Reviews

Critics

Average score: 72% (based on 24 ratings)

Players

Average score: 3.8 out of 5 (based on 21 ratings with 4 reviews)

A-10 Cuba!

The Good
I absolutely love the physics of this wonderful game.

The Bad
Needs more missions and area's to fly in. More planes to fly, etc. Just more more more of the overall game. If Parsoft ever comes back and makes more versions that are LIKE THIS game (cartoony looking), I'd buy it in a heart beat. It's just so fun to fly.

The Bottom Line
Worth every penny, go buy it! I used to fly online with Michael Harrison (he wrote the 1.2 patch for this game) and we had a lot of fun testing the patch.

Windows · by Pete Hawk (5) · 2003

Great first combat simulator with desert training and lots of weapons!

The Good
This is one of my favorite real aircraft and this game has been one of my favorites for a couple of years now. 4 basic training levels at a desert air base, and 12 missions in Cuba against land, sea and air targets. All standard weapons in multiple combinations: Sidewinder Missles; Rocket pods; HARMS; Cluster Bombs; 500/1000/2000 bombs (gravity, drag, and Laser Guided): Video, InfraRed, and Laser Guided Phonex type missles; & anti-runway missles. Exstensive controls, works with modern joysticks. Head to Head network combat mode also.

The Bad
Needs 9x/ME, only limited support for Win2000 (crashes if you have to Esc out to view the map or reload weapons). Could use some more missions.

The Bottom Line
Good game for when you have an hour to kill here and there, but not ideal for all-day play. All missions take less than 30 minutes to complete - though some can be streached out longer. After 3 years, I am still learning new tacticts and controls. Definitely belongs in your hanger!

Windows · by Donald Terry (2) · 2003

An Engrossing, Addictive, Must-Have Simulator

The Good
In creating A-10 Cuba, Eric Parker achieved a perfect blend of realism, playability and originality that have ensured this sim a permanent home in the pantheon of classic air combat titles. Precise attention to detail and excellent mission design are some of the hallmarks of this engrossing title.

To begin with, the physics are incredible. Ground handling, often an afterthought in flight simulators, is superior to some driving sims. Objects collide and ricochet in a very convincing manner, and the Warthog bobs and weaves with all the feel of a real airplane, which I can say as a licensed pilot. When part of a wing or horizontal stabilizer is destroyed, handling and stability are impacted accordingly. Fly too fast with the gear down and you'll see it slowly bend backwards. Clip your wing on a tall building and watch your plane spin out of control. Just about every surface and object in this sim interacts in a realistic way, and half the fun is trying to land your badly crippled Hawg with half a wing and no nose gear. At times, A-10 Cuba feels like a sim that was built around a physics engine.

Of course, fancy physics do not a game make, and thankfully A-10 Cuba provides a very big sandbox in which to explore. Training missions take place in a desert environment full of mesas and plateaus, while actual gameplay occurs in a bustling model of Cuba. Air, sea and ground traffic liven up the world, which is generously sprinkled with towns, harbors and airports. Wander into enemy airspace and you can expect to encounter active and deadly AA. Terrain is varied and interesting, providing ample opportunity to hotdog through valleys and tunnels. Simply exploring the island can be a real treat. An additional set of unusual and imaginative multiplayer-only environments are the icing on the cake.

A-10 Cuba does an excellent job of simulating the avionics and weapons systems of the Warthog. A variety of air-air and air-ground weapons are available including Sidewinder, Maverick and HARM missiles, cluster bombs, free-fall and laser guided bombs, kinetic energy rockets and Durandal anti-runway bombs. This is, of course, in addition to the Hawg's famous rotary cannon, which makes quick work of armored vehicles and AA launchers. Ordinance can be fired in single-release or programmed "ripple" modes, and CCIP ground targeting makes it easy to lob a thousand-pounder right through the enemy's front door.

Fortunately, all these elements combine brilliantly thanks to some very creative mission design. Clever placement of AA means you won't have time to relax enroute to target, and enemy fighters will often arrive when you're just about lined up for a bombing run. Both friendly and enemy AI are quite good, and though you can't communicate with wingmen, they usually get the job done without direction. Ten-plane furballs are a real sight to behold, and A-10 Cuba's generous view controls mean you'll get a good look at the carnage.

Lastly, the graphics may be dated but they're still extremely effective. The flat-polygon models are well made and the color schemes are excellent. As day becomes night the sky reddens, airport runways light up and the instrument lights bathe the cockpit in a warm glow. Without the overhead of texture maps or gouraud shading, this sim can run silky-smooth at 1024x768 even on an ancient 200MHz Pentium.

The Bad
There's not much bad to say about A-10 Cuba, though it does lack some flight-sim staples like a campaign mode and mission editor. The included missions are challenging but end quickly and leave you hungry for more.

The bundled help files are the only manual you'll get, and though they're effective, it feels strange to unwrap a flight simulator and not be greeted with an encyclopedic 200-page user guide.

In short, the main criticism of A-10 Cuba is that there needs to be MORE OF IT !

The Bottom Line
Though over a decade old, A-10 Cuba retains every ounce of its original appeal. The rich world environment, incredible physics and engrossing gameplay make it almost infinitely replayable. For the serious sim enthusiast who enjoys pounding the ground while dodging anti-aircraft rounds, or the Warthog fan who wants to get a feel for the character of this unique plane, A-10 Cuba is not to be missed!

Windows · by SiliconClassics (848) · 2007

[ View all 4 player reviews ]

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Contributors to this Entry

Game added by Gene Davison.

Macintosh added by magisterrex.

Additional contributors: Kennyannydenny.

Game added September 4, 2000. Last modified January 29, 2024.