
Look at this simulator’s score, kid. I’ve been training in secret here and became a pilot of an MS without missing a beat on that Jupiter. Uncle Geo… for a whole 10 years with such an old simulator! Surprised, huh? Even I, who takes down the Federation, hahaha! Even now, I’m close, training against a virtual Gundam design that doesn’t even have a magnet coating…
Actually, he’s an uncle who has a strong theory, but I still think he’s weak.
There is no way the Zeon side’s simulator, which is likely based on data collected very early on, has such a level of accuracy.
The performance on this side is also subtle, so it might work.
A post from 7 years ago.
I want to dominate against weak opponents, but I want to lose to named characters.
Even though it’s before the magnet coating, I’m guessing this machine is probably below that level too, so I think it’s strong to be able to win against Amuro.
It seems like there are a lot of uncles like this on the Federation side if it’s Zek Aكس.
Isn’t that a pretty desperate situation, like thinking you can easily handle online play because you can beat the strongest CPU in fighting games?
In the Giga Axe world, is it already around the time when Z development has started in the official timeline?
From 0089 to 90, the story of Double Zeta has concluded, and it has entered the phase of side story works.
Even if I can win against the RX78…
It’s a simulator, so I think it’s roughly the highest difficulty level of an action game.
I feel like I can totally manage it as long as it’s not interacting with the deformation machine for the first time.
Before the magnet coating, it seems that the red comet likely also follows the NT awakening standard…
In reality, the military uses flight simulators, and in this era, they are even more advanced.
I mistakenly thought that 10 years looked like 100 years, so I was under the impression that he was a long-lived old man.
I thought I should do my best in the space warring states era.
Even if the performance improves, the reaction speed of regular soldiers probably won’t change that much, but I think they will become fairly strong with practice.
If you fight it for the first time, you might underestimate the power of the beam weapon and get killed.
If Incom comes out, I won’t be able to respond and will die.
No matter how advanced the simulator is, if you’ve been doing the same thing for ten years, your score will surely go up.
Like in Knights of Sidonia… Maybe it’s impossible.
But Amuro’s RX-78 has weirder movements than the later works.
Wasn’t there a story about how the simulator Amuro is kind of off because it doesn’t react to killing intent?
After this, the uncle from Zeon will appear heroically to save the kid in a pinch, and it will turn out that the uncle from Zeon is really strong, right?
It’s been 10 years since the One Year War, and by now, not only has the Gryps Conflict concluded, but also the First Neo Zeon War.
I think this old man will be unable to cope and get defeated because the simulator doesn’t have variable MS or psycommu weapons.
The concern is whether it can respond to the difference in aircraft braking based on the amount of information from the 360-degree surround monitor.
It might be a difference in the amount of information, like recognizing and firing from a tank using a monitor while looking through a periscope.
Could it be the same one as the Amuro battle simulator from Blue Destiny?
A cheat Gundam that won’t sink no matter how many times it’s cut with that beam saber.
If you are defeating it with a Zeon machine below BD, that’s pretty impressive.
Speaking of which, since it has switched from a monocoque structure to a removable structure, the range of motion is completely different.
Ten years in the Universal Century is like a hundred years in reality.
The freshly made MS will be able to transform and combine.
This old man has been living for 10 years playing on a simulator without participating in the uprising of the remnants of Zeon that was so prominent; where is he hiding…?
Aren’t you in a clan battle?
I think it’s just that the movements are ingrained to match the quirks of the CPU.
So they think they are able to move based on their reactions.
Maybe someone who always faces the same opponent and has memorized their patterns.
If you keep doing it in the same environment, you’re probably going to develop some strange habits.
Even though there were various things like the Gryps Conflict, I must have been scared inside and ran away, saying I have to use the simulator!
I guess they have skills at least on par with an ace, but they would probably lose against named opponents…
It seems like something that would be in a fighting game.
It can defeat the data of Gundam at the departure point of Side 7!
If you have acquired skills like kicking debris as Char does, you might be able to aim for ace status once you get accustomed to the latest model.
I really like it when someone like this uncle truly shines at the very end and passes the torch to the younger generation.
Well, in Gundam, it’s probably a pattern where something like the thread image doesn’t play an active role.
Looking at the whole creation, being active is fundamental.
The novelty of Gundam is that the reinforced parts made by Dad are just garbage due to oxygen deprivation…
Basically, it’s become a one-pattern attack by exploiting the CPU’s quirks.
Speaking of which, in Gundam, Kio Asuno was unbeatable because he learned from games.
Well, there’s a problem with reaction speed, so I definitely can’t win against a serious CPU.
I, who defeated the CPU GP01 with the old Zaku in PS2’s Gundam Battle Machines, am the true super pilot…!
This old man hasn’t joined either AEUG or the first Neo Zeon and has been goofing off for 10 years.
If you can defeat the White Devil in the Zionic Front, you can boast about it.
Look at the score of this Blue Destiny, kid.
In that world, it seems like there are quite a few people who managed to survive those ten years as pilots…
In the case of a serious CPU, it will really react to the input.
Even excluding reaction speed, if you consider inertia and blackout/redout, you should easily win in simulations; otherwise, it’s not worth discussing.
In Crossbone Gundam Skull Heart, the bio-brain of the Jupiter Gundam Amakusa, which continued to simulate using Amuro’s data, was developed into a pilot that even surpasses the peak performance of Tobia.
The story of desperately clinging to the Mark II with the completely ineffective performance of a replica of the First Gundam, in order to delay the completion of the Mark II in Gundam Half, is quite painful.
If you remove the burden on the pilot, I think it can still work, so it’s better to make everything automated after all…
I want the uncle who rushed to the young Zeon soldier’s rescue to show a brief sparkle before being shot down normally.
Due to a lack of Gundam data, all parameters have been set to the maximum value.
I can shoot this guy down with an Ogg.