War Thunder: Their War (feat. Bristol Blenheim Mk IV)
"What we're dealing with here is a total lack of respect for the laws of physics." Video contains two explicit lyrics. Available in 720p at 60fps on supported systems. A cinematic depiction of a fictional battle in the South Pacific over Port Moresby, March 1942. Friendly aircraft are Bristol Blenheim Mk IVs. Enemies include the Kawasaki Ki-10, Nakajimi Ki-43 Hayabusa, and Kawasaki Ki-45. The Blen was powered by two Bristol Mercury air-cooled radial engines (although the engine start at the beginning of the video is a Bristol Hercules), and the Mk IV was updated from 860 hp to 905 hp. At the time of its first flight in 1935 it was the fastest RAF fighter, but by the start of the war (September 1939) it had been superseded. The armament was a single forward-facing Browning .303 (7.7mm), a dorsal turret with one or two Browning .303s, and a rear-firing under-the-nose turret with a further two .303s. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bristol_Blenheim for more information. The roundels on the camouflage scheme shown would have been unlikely to appear in the Pacific in real life, as there were concerns that the red dots could have been confused with Japanese markings, and these were widely removed. In War Thunder, the Blenheim lacks a cockpit view as of patch 1.43, so the dials and instrumentation are from another aircraft. I'll leave you to figure out which!
"What we're dealing with here is a total lack of respect for the laws of physics." Video contains two explicit lyrics. Available in 720p at 60fps on supported systems. A cinematic depiction of a fictional battle in the South Pacific over Port Moresby, March 1942. Friendly aircraft are Bristol Blenheim Mk IVs. Enemies include the Kawasaki Ki-10, Nakajimi Ki-43 Hayabusa, and Kawasaki Ki-45. The Blen was powered by two Bristol Mercury air-cooled radial engines (although the engine start at the beginning of the video is a Bristol Hercules), and the Mk IV was updated from 860 hp to 905 hp. At the time of its first flight in 1935 it was the fastest RAF fighter, but by the start of the war (September 1939) it had been superseded. The armament was a single forward-facing Browning .303 (7.7mm), a dorsal turret with one or two Browning .303s, and a rear-firing under-the-nose turret with a further two .303s. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bristol_Blenheim for more information. The roundels on the camouflage scheme shown would have been unlikely to appear in the Pacific in real life, as there were concerns that the red dots could have been confused with Japanese markings, and these were widely removed. In War Thunder, the Blenheim lacks a cockpit view as of patch 1.43, so the dials and instrumentation are from another aircraft. I'll leave you to figure out which!