Free North America landing challenge — 24 airports across Mexico, the US, and Canada.
▲ 56 r/MSFS2024+1 crossposts

Free North America landing challenge — 24 airports across Mexico, the US, and Canada.

A curated landing challenge circuit across North America.

The legs aren't random. Each one was hand-picked for a specific technical challenge. Three countries, real-world fleet per leg.

What I built around it:
- Single Interactive HTML file — open in any browser, no install required
- Interactive route map — 24 numbered airports, zoom-to-leg, 4 map styles
- Real-world aircraft per leg — operator, variant, TOP PICK badge
- Persistent progress tracker — mark legs flown, resume any time

Completely free. Login only to save progress — no emails, no spam, guaranteed.

https://flybushtrips.com/jet-journey/business-jet-north-america

Would genuinely love to know which leg breaks you first.

More Details:
Theme: Volcanic Shores, Sierra Summits, Canyon Crossings & Polar Wilderness
Duration Range: 1h02m – 1h40m per leg
Difficulty: Hard / Expert-Heavy

LEGs
── MEXICO: PACIFIC FIRE COAST ──
01 MMBT → MMZH
02 MMZH → MMPR
03 MMPR → MMSD
04 MMSD → MMHO
05 MMHO → MMTJ

── CALIFORNIA: FOG & GRANITE ──
06 MMTJ → KSFO
07 KSFO → KASE

── ROCKY MOUNTAIN ──
08 KASE → KTVL
09 KTVL → KDEN
10 KDEN → KJAC

── CASCADES: FIRE & RAIN SHADOW ──
11 KJAC → KMFR
12 KMFR → KSEA

── CANADA: ROCKIES TO THE SKEENA ──
13 KSEA → CYEG
14 CYEG → CYVR
15 CYVR → CYXT
16 CYXT → CYYC
17 CYYC → CYXJ
18 CYXJ → PAJN

── ALASKA: THE GREAT ARC ──
19 PAJN → PAFA
20 PAFA → PADQ
21 PADQ → PAOM
22 PAOM → PANC
23 PANC → PABR

u/DrawingBeginning7338 — 4 days ago

KPHX Approach

Caught the perfect golden hour into KPHX this morning. Just wanted to share this shot from my arrival into Phoenix Sky Harbor (KPHX) earlier today.

u/DrawingBeginning7338 — 8 days ago
▲ 103 r/MSFS2024+1 crossposts

Broke through the ceiling at 2000ft on the ILS into JFK. A350 cockpit hits different.

MSFS 2024 / iniBuilds A350 / KJFK

Nothing like an overcast approach into a busy field to remind you why you spent hours setting up the cockpit right. Solid 2000ft ceiling, visibility down, full ILS..

Cockpit on final, instruments live, breaking through the overcast.

What's your go-to approach for JFK?

u/DrawingBeginning7338 — 11 days ago

What would make a bush trip actually feel like it means something?

Been doing a lot of bush flying lately in MSFS 2024 and I keep running into the same feeling — the scenery is incredible, but I land at a waypoint and realize I have no idea what I just flew over or why it was worth stopping there.

Started thinking about what a truly story-driven bush trip would look like. Not just a pretty route — but something with a reason to exist. A narrative that evolves leg to leg. Context for what you're seeing from the cockpit.

Curious what this community actually wants from that kind of experience:

* Is it the history and geology — understanding the landscape you're flying through?
* Is it a character or scenario pulling you forward, like a mystery or a mission?
* How long do you want your legs? Stock trips feel too short to me — I want time to actually absorb the route.
* Would you pay for something like this if it was done really well, or does it need to be free to get any traction?

Also — what region or theme do you feel is completely missing from the bush trip world right now?

Not building anything (yet 👀) — just genuinely curious what the gap is before I go further down this rabbit hole.

reddit.com
u/DrawingBeginning7338 — 11 days ago
▲ 5 r/MSFS2024+1 crossposts

What would make a bush trip actually feel like it means something?

Been doing a lot of bush flying lately in MSFS 2024 and I keep running into the same feeling — the scenery is incredible, but I land at a waypoint and realize I have no idea what I just flew over or why it was worth stopping there.

Started thinking about what a truly story-driven bush trip would look like. Not just a pretty route — but something with a reason to exist. A narrative that evolves leg to leg. Context for what you're seeing from the cockpit.

Curious what this community actually wants from that kind of experience:

  • Is it the history and geology — understanding the landscape you're flying through?
  • Is it a character or scenario pulling you forward, like a mystery or a mission?
  • How long do you want your legs? Stock trips feel too short to me — I want time to actually absorb the route.
  • Would you pay for something like this if it was done really well, or does it need to be free to get any traction?

Also — what region or theme do you feel is completely missing from the bush trip world right now?

Not building anything (yet 👀) — just genuinely curious what the gap is before I go further down this rabbit hole.

reddit.com
u/DrawingBeginning7338 — 12 days ago