List of fictional aircraft
Some of this article's listed sources may not be reliable. (July 2019) |
This is a list of fictional aircraft, including fixed wing aircraft, rotary wing aircraft, and lighter-than-air craft. The aircraft in this list are generally intended to operate in an atmosphere, though a few have been depicted as being capable of exoatmospheric or suborbital flight as well.
These aircraft appear in notable works of fiction including novels, stories, films, TV series, animation, video games, comics, and other works. They are either the subject of the work or an important element.
Fighters[]
- ACG-01 Chimera : A prototype aircraft with exceptional maneuverability and responsiveness, it can be equipped with RDBM (Remote Detonation Burst Missile) and EUFB (Experimental Uranium Freefall Bomb) ordinance. From Project Wingman (2020)
- Advanced Dominance Fighter: A family of superplanes developed by Gründer Industries in the Ace Combat series of video games.
- ADF-01 FALKEN: a superfighter armed with an internal laser system, the ability to jam and disrupt HUD, and backwards-fire capabilities first featured in Ace Combat 2 (1997)
- ADFX-01/02 Morgan: A family of experimental fighters capable of carrying a laser system and burst missiles first featured in Ace Combat Zero: The Belkan War (2006)
- ADA-01B ADLER: an attacker variant of the ADF-01 FALKEN, designed to defend it from surface-to-air attacks. It is the B model in the ADA-01 line of aircraft, from Ace Combat: Infinity (2014)
- ADF-11F Raven: a super-fighter that can optionally use an unmanned drone as the cockpit, which can detach and expand to fly on its own as the ADF-11, from Ace Combat 7: Skies Unknown (2019)
- Angel Interceptor: a carrier-based jet fighter from the 1967 TV series Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons. The aircraft operates from an airborne aircraft carrier named Cloudbase. The craft is based on the World Air Force Viper, powered by twin turbo-jet compressors feeding a single ramjet. It is armed with a nose cannon and rockets.[1]
- ASF-X Shinden II: an experimental fighter designed by Macross creator Shōji Kawamori for Ace Combat: Assault Horizon (2011)
- AV-14 Attack VTOL: a UNSC airborne attack vehicle, also known as the Hornet, from the Halo video game series[2]
- A/V-32 Pegasus: a fictional jumpjet operated by the US Marine Corps in the Jim DeFelice novel Havana Strike.[3]
- Cobra Rattler: a VTOL attack plane based on the Fairchild Republic A-10 Thunderbolt II (affectionately known as the Warthog). It made its first appearance in G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero in 1984
- CFA-44 Nosferatu: an advanced fighter plane with all-directional missiles (ADMMs), internal jamming pods, and dual railguns from Ace Combat 6: Fires of Liberation (2007)
- CS7 Thunderhawk: a single-engine fighter plane from Just Cause 3 armed with homing missiles and a machine gun for strafing, which also features partially-folding wings. Used both by the in-universe Medici Military and the opposing rebellion against the military's commander, Sebastiano Di Ravello.
- F-11X Apollo: a VTOL-equipped single-seater fighter jet equipped with autocannons used by the Allies in Command & Conquer: Red Alert 3 (2008)
- F-19 Ghostrider: based on the Have Blue project of the 1970s. Testors model maker released a conceptual model airplane in 1986, and Monogram followed with its own version in 1987. Earning massive media attention, the design became the shape of the mysterious "Stealth Fighter" in the public eye until the F-117 Nighthawk was unveiled in 1990. As it turned out, the sleek and low-profile design looked nothing like the highly angular, faceted F-117 it was meant to portray.[4][5]
- F-41 Broadsword: a UNSC exoatmospheric multirole strike fighter. It is capable of operating within an atmosphere or in a vacuum; the F-41E variant features energy shielding, as seen in Halo 4. This craft comes from the Halo video game series.[6]
- F-22V Velociraptor: a delta-wing version of the F-22 Raptor featured in the Jim DeFelice novel Cyclops One.[7]
- F/A-37 Talon: a single-seat fighter attack aircraft of the U.S. Navy, which appeared in the 2005 film Stealth. It is capable of Mach 3.5, supercruise and has a range of 4,000 miles. It is also accompanied by an AI-operated UAV which assists in targeting and ISR for the Talon.[8][9]
- Firehawk: a VTOL multi-role fighter jet that appears in Command & Conquer 3. The craft is a two-seat, forward-swept wing design with rearwards-swept winglets and canards. It can be outfitted with special boosters that enable it to go sub-orbital, allowing it to bypass anti-aircraft fire.[10]
- Gilbert XF-120: a fictitious X-jet portrayed by an XB-51 in camouflage from the 1956 film Toward the Unknown[11]
- Manta Fighter: a single-place 1939 twin-prop design, with a delta tail & straight wings near the aft, from the 2004 film Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow[12]
- Mikoyan CF-121 Redhawk: an April Fools prank detailing the RCAF purchase of 30 MiG-21s for Squadron 441 in 1960.[13]
- MiG-28: a fictional aircraft flown by the antagonist in the 1986 film Top Gun. The real aircraft used to portray the MiG-28 was a Northrop F-5.[14]
- MiG-31 Firefox: a fictional aircraft that appeared in Craig Thomas' novels Firefox and Firefox Down, as well as the 1982 film by the same name starring Clint Eastwood. The aircraft was portrayed as a Soviet interceptor with stealth capabilities, and had a thought-controlled weapons system.[15] Its designation is shared with the real MiG-31 Foxhound.[16]
- MiG-37 Ferret: a fictional Soviet stealth model aircraft, produced by the Testors Model Company, as a counter to the American F-19. The craft combined a faceted airframe design with cooled exhausts, and radar-absorbing skin. Purely conjectural, the design nonetheless turned out to be closer in shape to the actual F-117 Nighthawk.[17]
- MiG-242: a fictional Soviet aircraft appearing in the 1968 pilot episode of Joe 90, a British Supermarionation television series co-created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson[18]
- Orca Fighter: a fictional fighter succeeding the ORCA Assault Craft, retaining its VTOL capabilities and articulated engine design, armed with Hellfire missiles. Appears in Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun[19]
- Savoia S.21: a fictional fighter seaplane that appears in the anime film Porco Rosso, directed by Hayao Miyazaki. Its name is shared with the real-life Savoia S.21; however, the two do not look similar.[20]
- Su-38 Slamhound: a Russian Spetsnaz Guard Brigade support fighter in EndWar[21]
- VF-0 Phoenix: from the Macross Zero anime sci-fi series[22]
- Venom: a fictional multipurpose VTOL aircraft used by the Brotherhood of Nod in Command & Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars and its expansion, Kane's Wrath[23]. It's armed with a pair of chin-mounted anti-infantry machine guns and mirroring equipment on its belly, enabling it to work in tandem with Nod's long-range laser weapons. Optionally, the craft can be equipped with signature generators that can send conflicting inputs for the enemy radar to pick up, which can make a single Venom appear as a full force on the scanners. It can also be outfitted with laser or supercharged particle weaponry in place of the machine guns.
- Vic Viper: the protagonist jet fighter in the video game Gradius. It is a high-performance jet fighter, capable of variable attacks.[24]
- Willis JA-3: a rocket/jet 1400 mph X-plane from the 1950 film Chain Lightning, with Humphrey Bogart[25]
- XA-20 Razorback: a main support fighter in the United States Joint Strike Force in EndWar. Also appears in H.A.W.X as a reward for completing the game, revealing it to have stealth capabilities.[26]
- XFA-24A Apalis: an experimental multirole fighter developed in the 2010s, first featured in Ace Combat X: Skies of Deception (2006)
- XFA-27: a multirole fighter aircraft with variable geometry wings, boasting high maneuverability. First featured in Ace Combat 2 (1997)
- XFA-33 Fenrir: a multirole aircraft possessing a massive airframe, and equipped with optical camouflage, thrust vectoring engines, wingtips, delta wing configuration, canards and V-tail. First featured in Ace Combat X: Skies of Deception (2006)
- XP-14F Skystriker: the primary air-superiority fighter used by G.I. Joe in the comics and animated series in the early 1980s, sold as a toy from 1983-86. It closely resembles the real-life U.S. Navy F-14 Tomcat.[27]
- Yak-12: a fictional Soviet jet aircraft featured in the film Jet Pilot starring John Wayne. A Lockheed T-33 was used to portray fictitious plane. The designation does exist in the form of the Yakovlev Yak-12 a utility airplane from the Soviet Union.[11]
- YSS-1000 Sabre: a fictional spaceplane being developed by the UNSC. It appears in Halo: Reach.[28]
Bombers[]
- A-15 Orca: the third iteration of Global Defense Initiative's signature attack aircraft, appearing in Command & Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars and its expansion, Kane's Wrath[29]. The SAAB/Lancaster Lifting Body, Inc. designed the new variant basing on the "make the tech visible" doctrine of GDI's design, and new model of the Orca features two ducted VTOL aerodynes, providing a maximum speed of 400 knots, with a combat range of 482 kilometers, or 1899 kilometers when stripped of combat gear. It is 58.3 ft long, 48 ft wide, and 12.7 ft high, and its maximum flight altitude is said to be 12801 meters. The A-15 Orca is armed with AGM-240 air-to-ground missiles, an on-demand pulse scanner, and can optionally be outfitted with anti-stealth sensor pods.
- ADA-01 ADLER: an attacker variant of the ADF-01 FALKEN. As the first aircraft in the ADA-01 series developed by Gründer Industries, it was designed to be complementary to the FALKEN and defend it from surface-to-air attacks. It was also designed to test the experimental SDBM weapon. It was planned to appear in Ace Combat 5: The Unsung War but the idea was scrapped. The B model in the ADA-01 line of aircraft, that replaces the SDBM from the ADA-01A with the MPBM, appears in Ace Combat Infinity as a playable aircraft.
- Banshee: a bomber made by the Brotherhood of Nod from reverse-engineered technology obtained through an extraterrestrial matrix called the Tacitus. It is outfitted with two rapid-fire plasma cannons, and appears in Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun
- B-2X Century: a VTOL-equipped heavy bomber equipped with iron bombs and which could also deploy paratroopers used by the Allies in Command & Conquer: Red Alert 3 (2008)
- B-3: a fictional derivative of the B-2 Stealth Bomber featured in the 1996 film Broken Arrow[30] and Command & Conquer: Generals – Zero Hour
- B-39 Peacemaker: a fictional USAF Cold War nuclear-powered bomber in the Charles Stross novelette A Colder War[31]
- EB-52 Megafortress: The Megafortress first appears in Dale Brown's novel Flight of the Old Dog and is expanded and upgraded in his later books. The design contains a long SST nose, with a stealth shape, and twin V-tails. The eight engines are replaced by four larger turbofans further down the line.[32]
- EB-1C Vampire: first appearing in Dale Brown's novel Battle Born, the EB-1C is an advanced variant of the B-1 bomber. It differs from the real B-1 in that its wings are always swept all the way back, the tail is smaller and lacks the horizontal stabilizer, and it utilizes "Mission Adaptive Skin" that works by micro-hydraulics to affect the shape of its wings in-flight.[33]
- Orca Bomber: a VTOL bomber succeeding the aging ORCA Assault Craft, outfitted with two large bomb bays bolted to its hull, allowing precision bombardments, used by the Global Defense Initiative in Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun[34]
- SuperCOIL: a secretly developed radar-invisible B-2 bomber, code-named SuperCOIL, carries an airborne, chemically fueled "COIL" laser powerful enough to shoot down missiles in mid-flight, in the thriller novel “SuperCOIL” by Robert Ari.[35]
- Vertigo Bomber: a fictional VTOL stealth bomber employed by the Brotherhood of Nod, carrying a Lighbender stealth generator, a single heavy bomb and optional disruption pods. The craft appears in Command & Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars and its expansion, Kane's Wrath[36]
- Vindicator: A fictitious supersonic bomber based on the Convair B-58 Hustler. In the 1964 film Fail Safe, the attack on Moscow is made by a squadron of Vindicators. While exterior shots of the plane relied on footage of B-58s, interior shots depicted a three-man crew, similar to that of a conventional airliner, and distinct from the tandem seating on a real B-58. The fictional Vindicator bomber was again represented by the B-58 Hustler in Fail Safe, a 2000 made-for-TV remake starring George Clooney.
Gunships[]
- AT-99 Scorpion: a VTOL gunship which uses twin ducted-rotors for lift. It has a crew of one. The aircraft appears in the 2009 film Avatar.[37]
- C-21 Dragon: a VTOL four-post ducted-fan transport and gunship which appears in the film Avatar[38]
- Harpy: a support gunship succeeding the obsolete AH-64 Apache, used by the Brotherhood of Nod in Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun[39]. It features an aerodynamic, stealthy design (to which it owes its invisibility on enemy radars), a powerful rotor and an integrated chaingun cannon in its forward section. The craft is mainly used as a scout or an anti-infantry helicopter, though on many ocassions it was used to evacuate important personnel from the battlefield.
- ORCA Assault Craft: a multipurpose VTOL gunship developed and used by the Global Defense Initiative, employing a set of twin articulated jet engines and Dragon TOW missile launchers, appearing in the 1995 real-time strategy game Command & Conquer[40]
- SA-2 Samson: a ducted-fan twin-rotor utility assault transport from the film Avatar[41]
- Airships: Appear in Project Wingman. Powered by the (fictitious) valuable resource Cordium. Also sometimes referred to as gunships by AWACS Galaxy. Each airship class has 3 variants.[42]
Unmanned aerial vehicles[]
- Burst Drone: a dragonfly-like multipurpose drone used by the Empire of the Rising Sun in Command & Conquer: Red Alert 3. Its wings double as solar powering panels, and it is equipped with a stealth detector and an attachment system that allows it to attach itself to enemy vehicles to track and slow them down. The drone is also armed with a system that allows it to commence a self-destruction sequence ending with an explosion.[43]
- EDI: Featured in the film Stealth, the Extreme Deep Invader (EDI) was developed as an assistant to the FA-37 Talon. The craft has an artificial intelligence system that allows it to operate without a human pilot. The sensors can identify a human target by fingerprints, voice print or facial recognition. It has V/STOL capabilities and pulse-detonation engines which feature twin hybrid scramjet turbos fueled by catalyzed A1 methane.[44]
- MQ-99: A drone developed by Gründer Industries. It were meant to intercept an enemy aircraft crossed on a so called "drone interceptor network". The drone will launched if the pilot not responded at amount of time. It also capable launched from shipping container. From Ace Combat 7: Skies Unknown (2019)
- UCAV Wyvern: A drone seen in the game War Thunder that was featured in the 2021 April Fools event. The Wyvern featured anti-air missiles, cruise missiles and anti-ground missiles. The Wyvern has significantly superior metals and alloys that allowed the drone to achieve extremely high wing overload rates compared to planes that are regularly seen in the game. The Wyvern was removed from the game on the 5th of April 2021 as the April Fools event concluded.
Special operations[]
- Aerowing: an aircraft that the story says was built by villain Lex Luthor. It has two fuselages, six engines and undernose guns and it was flown in 1928 (sic) from mid-Atlantic to the Amazon rainforest in the DC Comics book Elseworld's Finest #2[45]
- Airwolf: an attack helicopter from the 1984 TV series by the same name. It was capable of supersonic flight, and carried retractable weapons. The helicopter used was a modified Bell 222.[46]
- Albatross: appears in Gerry Anderson’s TV series New Captain Scarlet[47]
- AmphibiCopter: a 21st century submersible two-seater aircraft which appeared in the 2001 film AI: Artificial Intelligence[48]
- Batcopter: a modified Bell 47G-3 which made an appearance in the 1966 film Batman[49]
- Batwing: This iconic aircraft was used in the 1989 film Batman starring Michael Keaton[50]
- Blue Thunder: a fictional police helicopter from the film and television series of the same name. The aircraft incorporated an optically tracked gatling gun, a whisper mode for quiet flight, surveillance equipment and an infrared camera. The helicopter used in the film was a modified Aérospatiale Gazelle.[51]
- Bubble ship: an aircraft that resembled a dragon fly combined with the canopy of a Bell 47 helicopter. The machine features rotating VTOL engines and a cockpit that swivels along with the upper and lower guns fixed to it. The craft was flown by Tom Cruise’s character “Jack Harper”, in the sci-fi film Oblivion.[52]
- BV-38 Flying Wing: a twin prop, bent-winged transport, which appeared in the 1981 film Raiders of the Lost Ark[53][54]
- D79-TC Pelican: often shortened to just Pelican, is an extremely versatile dropship used by the UNSC, mainly for the transportation, insertion and pickup of personnel, vehicles and equipment. Occasionally used as a support gunship in the Halo video game franchise[55][56]
- Cobra F.A.N.G.: a short range one man light-attack gyrocopter, equipped with air-to-air heat-seeking rockets. This craft appeared in the comics and the first season of the G.I. Joe animated series, as well in the 1985 computer game.[57]
- Condor (Variants Referred to as Vulture): A main element of the first chapter of Wolfenstein: The New Order and appearing in Wolfenstein: The Old Blood, the Condor is the supposed result of the modification of an Avro Lancaster using American built parts. It is equipped with four quad autocannon turrets, with one mounted above the protruding cockpit, two mounted at the top and bottom of the tail end, and one turret chin-mounted below the cockpit. The autocannons appear to fire HVAP rounds exclusively, as enemy aircraft can take multiple hits without catching fire, while armored ground units are affected much more by these rounds. Although the official name for this type of aircraft is "Condor", the call sign for troop transport variants is Vulture, while "Condor" call signs only being used to refer to the troop support variants.
- F-117X Remora: an experimental F-117 variant used in the film Executive Decision. It is modified to transport personnel with an in-flight docking probe designed to dock with other aircraft in midair. Originally designed to relieve fatigued bomber crews at altitude, this aircraft was used to transport a special operations unit to board a commercial airliner which had been hijacked by terrorists.[citation needed]
- Flying Sub FS-1: Introduced in the Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea TV series, this hybrid submersible is capable of flight, as well as conducting underwater operations. The design resembles that of a Stingray fish, with twin tail fins on the back, and has room for a crew of two.[58]
- Ornithopter: a flapping-wing craft featured in the novel Dune by Frank Herbert and in the 1984 film by the same name[59][60]
- Snowspeeder: a military variant of the T-47 airspeeder, adapted for the cold climates. The craft appeared in the 1980 film The Empire Strikes Back.[61]
- Invisible plane: from the Wonder Woman comic books and TV series[62]
- Quinjet: a craft featured in the Avengers comic books and films. It is a multi-role jet aircraft used by S.H.I.E.L.D, with VTOL capabilities and has a titled cockpit to provide the pilots with better visibility during landings[63]
- Spider's Wing: a flying wing aircraft used by the leader of the Spider Gang to terrorize the citizens in the Dick Tracy comics[64]
- Tiltrotor craft: a stealth VTOL vehicle used by the Antagonist's in the sci-fi film Resident Evil: Afterlife. The craft has similarities to the real life V-22 Osprey.[65]
- Thunderbird 2: from Gerry Anderson's Thunderbirds. It is a bulbous VTOL cargo carrier that came equipped with a variety of service modules.[66]
- UH-144 Falcon: a tiltrotor troop transport used by the UNSC in the Halo franchise[67]
- X-Jet Blackbird: featured in the X-Men films, this was a modified SR-71 with forward swept wings, and VTOL capable. The craft was roomy enough to carry a dozen personnel.[68]
- YF-12A X-Jet Prototype: the predecessor to the X-Jet and the SR-71 Blackbird, the aircraft was designed and flown by Hank McCoy aka Beast. The prototype incorporates VTOL capabilities and an internal cargo hold for personnel. The plane appeared in the 2011 film X-Men: First Class.[69]
Civilian[]
Commercial[]
- Antonov 500: a heavy transport that appeared in the film 2012, based on the Antonov An-225[70]
- Carreidas 160: a prototype 10-seat, supersonic business jet seen in Flight 714 to Sydney, one of The Adventures of Tintin[71][72]
- Elgin E-474: featured in the 2005 film Flightplan, based on the Airbus A380[73]
- Fireflash: a hypersonic transport featured in Gerry Anderson's Thunderbirds TV series[74]
- Fortress-1 and Fortress-2: successive pair of helicarrier-like, massive vehicles employed by the fictional Cyberbiotics Corporation in the Disney animated series Gargoyles, commissioned by the firm's founder, the disabled CEO Halcyon Renard[75]
- Hindenburg III: an upgraded dirigible featured in the film Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow[76]
- Norton N-22: a wide-body passenger aircraft at the center of a safety investigation in Michael Crichton's novel Airframe[77]
- Orion III: a space plane featured in the 1968 sci-fi film 2001: A Space Odyssey, the craft was used to shuttle personal from earth to the orbiting space station, and wore the Pan Am livery
- Rutland Reindeer: appeared in No Highway in the Sky, a film based loosely on Neville Shute's No Highway.[78] The aircraft used was a modified Handley Page Halifax.[79]
- Skyfleet S570: a prototype airplane that appeared in the 2006 film Casino Royale, which was actually a Boeing 747-200 originally owned by British Airways. It was refitted with two mock-up engines on each inner pylon and external fuel tanks on the outer pylons, somewhat anachronistically resembling a B-52 Stratofortress.[80]
- Spectrum Passenger Jet: a twin turbojet personnel transport, from Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons[81]
- Starflight: a hypersonic transport which was featured in the 1983 TV movie Starflight: The Plane That Couldn't Land[82]
- Rocket plane: a Concorde-like rocket plane used by the Nazi Empire in The Man in the High Castle novel and TV series[83]
- Luxemburg (LZ131): a dirigible based on a Zeppelin design, which appeared in the climatic ending of the 1991 film The Rocketeer[84]
Personal[]
- Albatross: a 19th-century large propellered airship in the novel Robur the Conqueror aka Clipper of the Clouds by Jules Verne, and in the film version of Verne's The Master of the World[85][86]
- Conwing L-16: a fictitious, amphibious seaplane model based on the Fairchild C-119 Flying Boxcar featured in the animated Disney series TaleSpin, an example of which is the Sea Duck flown by bush pilot Baloo[87][88]
- Drake Bullet: an air racer flown by Clark Gable’s character in the 1938 film Test Pilot. A Seversky P-35 was used to fulfill that role.[89]
- Harold the Helicopter: a cartoon helicopter based on the Sikorsky H-19 featured in the Thomas & Friends TV series[90]
- Möwe, a jet-powered motor glider–like craft used by the titular character in Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind. The craft was brought from fiction to reality by fans of the film under the name OpenSky.[91]
- T-16 Skyhopper: Luke Skywalker's canyon flyer on the planet Tatooine which appeared in Star Wars: A New Hope[92]
- The Terror: a 19th-century land, sea and air craft invented by Robur the Conqueror featured in Verne's novel The Master of the World[86]
Airborne aircraft carriers[]
- Argo: flying wing operated by Monarch that deploys and recovers V-22 Ospreys in Godzilla: King of the Monsters[93]
- Arsenal Bird: A large, flying wing aircraft carrier. Designed to hold up to 80 MQ-101s. Armed with three laser defense systems, air-to-air missile launchers, and an energy shield referred to as the Active Protection System (APS). Featured in Ace Combat 7: Skies Unknown
- AAC-03 Banshee III: A massive airborne aircraft carrier that is used as a base of operations. Two Banshees, the other which is designated as AAC-04 Banshee IV, were built to allow the FAF to coordinate their operations anywhere over the surface of the continent. It appears in both the Yukikaze anime and novel adaptation.
- Cloudbase: Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons[94]
- Daedalus: Flying aircraft carrier used by STAG (Special Tactical Anti-Gang unit) in Saints Row: The Third
- Helicarrier: Nick Fury/S.H.I.E.L.D./The Avengers/The Avengers: Age of Ultron/Captain America: The Winter Soldier[95]
- Iron Vulture: airship captained by the air pirate leader Don Karnage in the Disney animated series TaleSpin[96]
- Pandora: airship used by Nathan Zachary and his air pirate gang the Fortune Hunters in the Crimson Skies game franchise[97]
- Royal Navy flying aircraft carriers: Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow[98]
- Skybase: Gerry Anderson's New Captain Scarlet[99]
- Valiant: flying command ship/aircraft carrier used by UNIT in Doctor Who[100]
- P-1112 Aigaion: An airborne aircraft carrier that have ability to carry airburst cruise missile(in long range,it uses a target drone to determine impact coordinate) similar to Helios equiped on Arsenal Bird. It's also serve as a base for infamous Estovakia elite squadron "Strigon Team". From Ace Combat 6: Fires of Liberation (2007)
- Arkbird: A long range ASAT builded by Oseans during Cold War (Strangereal version) in late 1990's. It were equipped with laser that have ability to shoot down SLBM and more type of missile. It also launch several UAV to protect itself, along with pulse laser and conventional defense weapon. From Ace Combat 5: The Unsung War (2005)
See also[]
References[]
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