-fsx P3d V3 V4- Spai Traffic Pack V7 - Ai Traffic Summer 2017 Utorrent -
The date of the pack’s last file update.
That’s when he noticed the date on the sim’s internal clock: . He hadn’t set it. He tried to change it. The field was grayed out.
The frozen AI aircraft began to move again. But their taxi routes were wrong. They converged toward him. The Delta 717 rolled over grass. The Horizon Q400’s propellers bent reality. And the Southwest 737 at the gate—its engines spooled up with no one inside.
The file was 14.7 GB—a relic from the golden age of flight simulation forums, uploaded in 2017 and seeded by ghosts. The comments section was a digital graveyard of broken promises: “V4 works?” (No reply). “Seed pls” (from 2019). “Virus?” (unanswered). But one user, SkyKing_2007 , had left a cryptic note seven months ago: “Works. But you’ll see things. Just fly.” The date of the pack’s last file update
His computer rebooted. The BIOS screen flashed. Then the flight simulator launched itself—no desktop, no Windows, just the P3D interface with a new startup image: a Southwest 737, registration N-07-23-17, flying over a featureless ocean.
Marcus screamed as the 737 lurched forward, its nose gear clipping through his cockpit. The P3D window went black. Then blue. Then a single line of text appeared:
He launched P3D at dawn, selecting Seattle-Tacoma International (KSEA). The load bar crept to 100%. When the cockpit view materialized, his jaw dropped. He tried to change it
Then the comms crackled.
If you ever see on a forum from 2017, remember: the sky is never empty. And some flights never land.
Taxiing was surreal. Every AI aircraft moved with fluid precision—no stuttering, no popping in and out of existence. They followed him to the runway, held short, and waited. As he lined up for takeoff, a United 787 whispered overhead on final. The wake turbulence effect, not native to P3D, rocked his 737. But their taxi routes were wrong
He panned the camera. A pristine Southwest 737-700 sat at the adjacent gate, engines off, stairs attached. But the livery was wrong. No Heart logo. Instead, the fuselage read: – and below it, a registration number: N-07-23-17 .
“That’s the aircraft they never found,” the message continued. “The one that disappeared over the Pacific on June 23, 2017. 144 souls. No wreckage. No black box. Only the ATC recording—until someone repacked us into this traffic add-on.”
Then he found the torrent.
“Marcus.”
He was about to throttle up when the AI traffic froze.