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The Venezuelan army’s FPV drone simulator looks a lot like this $3.99 video game

Two screenshots of social media videos show the Venezuelan military academy's drone simulators in action.
Venezuela’s military academy for its army showcased several “FPV drone simulators” that resemble arcade machines but are likely loaded with a publicly available video game.

  • The Venezuelan army’s commanding general was seen this weekend promoting FPV drone simulators.
  • They look almost identical to the video game “FPV Kamikaze Drone,” which goes for $3.99 on Steam.
  • Tell-tale similarities include the simulator’s level-select menu, engine physics, and UI.

Venezuela’s military academy for army officers promoted a new set of FPV drone simulators this weekend, touting clips of young cadets performing virtual attack maneuvers.

The simulator software bears a striking resemblance to a video game sold online for $3.99.

Dressed up to resemble arcade machines in digital camouflage, each simulation station features a flat screen, a trackball, a joystick, and a remote controller.

The promotional videos, filmed at the country’s Military Academy of the Bolivarian Army in Caracas, were released amid soaring US-Venezuela tensions that have sparked fears of open war between the two nations.

“These young people who are here are ready to destroy the enemy,” General Johan Hernández Láre, the Venezuelan army’s commanding general, says in Spanish during one clip published on Friday.

The camera pans to show several uniformed personnel standing to attention, before one cadet volunteers to demonstrate a simulator.

An operator helps him fire up the screen, which appears to show a level-select menu.

A Venezuelan military cadet holds a remote controller as an operator selects a game level for him.
A Business Insider annotation highlights the level-select screen on the simulator.

The menu resembles that of “FPV Kamikaze Drone,” a video game developed by the Russian firm HFM Games. Copies are sold on the online marketplace platform Steam for $3.99.

A screenshot of FPV Kamikaze Drone's level-select menu.
Level-select images for FPV Kamikaze Drone look a lot like the one in Venezuela’s simulator.

The similarities continue once the virtual mission loads. The cadet is seen flying his virtual FPV drone toward a target at a building complex.

A Venezuelan cadet flies their virtual drone above a building complex.
A cadet flies his virtual drone toward a target in the Venezuelan military’s touted simulator.

The user interface elements, engine physics, computer graphics, and the visual appearance of the payload on the virtual drone match those found on “FPV Kamikaze Drone.”

A screenshot of gameplay from FPV Kamikaze Drone,.
User interface elements for the Venezuelan simulator are identical to those of FPV Kamikaze Drone.

The simulators were again promoted on Saturday by the Venezuelan academy’s social media page.

“The Bolivarian Army Military Academy receives FPV drone simulators thanks to the joint effort and support of our Bolivarian National Armed Forces,” a presenter for the academy said in a selfie video.

The promotional clip showed a row of simulators in a corridor, with cadets in dress uniforms operating the machines.

“FPV” stands for first-person-view, or the category of inexpensive hobby drones that have become a staple in the Ukraine war.

Years of constant use and a largely stagnant frontline have turned the FPV drone into one of the conflict’s deadliest weapons, prompting militaries around the world to expand their light drone arsenals and beef up training to pilot and counter them.

To that end, dozens of software developers have since released video games and programs that aim to simulate flying FPV drones in combat. Some developers even virtually recreate real scenarios described by frontline pilots.

A screenshot of gameplay from Venezuela's drone simulator.
The Military Academy’s video also showed cadets and officers playing with the simulator.

It’s not unusual for troops to learn with virtual drone programs. The US Army has designed its own computer programs, such as the Unmanned Advanced Lethality Course, to train soldiers on how to operate small drones using just a controller and a computer.

But training rarely stops at just the simulator. Aspiring drone pilots in Ukraine, for example, often must test their skills on a live range before they’re trusted to perform on the battlefield.

“FPV Kamikaze Drone” appears to simulate battlefield conditions in Ukraine or western Russia, featuring mostly open terrain with patches of forest, small towns, and isolated buildings.

It’s unclear how effectively its virtual missions can be applied to the diverse terrain in Venezuela, which includes rainforests, highlands, and mountain ranges.

HFM Games, the developer of the drone game, did not respond to a request for comment sent outside regular business hours by Business Insider. The Venezuelan Defense Ministry did not respond to a similar request sent to a contact email address on its website.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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