Free shipping in Luxembourg from 25€
Notepad
The notepad is empty.
The basket is empty.
Free shipping in Luxembourg from 25 €
Free shipping in Luxembourg from 25€
Please wait - the print view of the page is being prepared.
The print dialogue opens as soon as the page has been completely loaded.
If the print preview is incomplete, please close it and select "Print again".

Flying High -v1.4.13- -miro Affect3d- Apr 2026

There’s a certain thrill to unlocking a new build: the hush before you tap the controller, the way the world onscreen seems to hold its breath. Flying High — v1.4.13 — from Miro Affect3D lands like that: a polished little leap forward that smartly balances technical polish with emotional payoff. First impressions Booting v1.4.13 feels immediate and confident. Load times are tighter, animations breathe smoother, and the overall frame holds steadier. The interface tweaks are subtle but meaningful: clearer icons, fewer nested menus, and a settings panel that finally trusts you to customize without hunting for options. The tone is authoritative without being imposing — the game wants you in the sky, not stuck in configuration. Visuals and animation Miro’s team have steadily refined their visual language, and this update continues the trend. Textures pop with better contrast and slightly richer color grading; light plays on surfaces in a way that makes environments readable at a glance. Character motion shows the most refinement: transitions feel organic, weight and momentum read convincingly, and small touches (a delayed blink, a shoulder settling after a turn) add personality. The result is not photorealism, but an expressive, tactile aesthetic that supports immersion. Gameplay and controls Controls in v1.4.13 strike a rewarding balance between accessibility and nuance. New input smoothing helps reduce jitter for players using gamepads, while mouse and keyboard retain that tight responsiveness veteran players expect. Flight handling is tuned so that maneuvers feel deliberate—skillful pilots are rewarded, but newcomers won’t be thrown off by unforgiving physics.