VBS2
VBS2 Box Art | |
Original author(s) | Bohemia Interactive Simulations (since 1.40), BIS and BIA (worldwide) |
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Developer(s) | Bohemia Interactive Simulations |
Initial release | April 17, 2007 |
Stable release | 2.12 |
Platform | PC |
Type | Military simulation and training. Computer simulation. |
Website | http://www.bisimulations.com/ |
VBS2 (Virtual Battlespace 2) is the successor of the battlefield simulation system VBS1. It was developed in close cooperation with the USMC, Australian Defence Force and other military customers of VBS1. VBS2 was officially launched on 17 April 2007.[1]
Information
VBS2 offers realistic battlefield simulations and the ability to operate land, sea, and air vehicles. Instructors may create new scenarios and then engage the simulation from multiple viewpoints. The squad-management system enables participants to issue orders to squad members.
VBS2 was designed for federal, state, and local government agencies and can be specifically tailored to meet the individual needs of military, law enforcement, homeland defense, loadmaster, and first responder training environments.
VBS2 may be used to teach doctrine, tactics, techniques, and procedures during squad and platoon offensive, defensive, and patrolling operations. VBS2 delivers a synthetic environment for the practical exercise of the leadership and organizational behavior skills required to successfully execute unit missions.
VBS2 is suitable for training small teams in urban tactics, entire combat teams in combined arms operations or even non-military usage such as emergency response procedures in lethal and non-lethal environments or terrain visualization.
VBS2 is based on the VBS2Real Virtuality 2, also used in the video game Arma 2.
Technology
The simulation engine driving VBS2 is Real Virtuality 2, developed by Bohemia Interactive. VBS2 allows a user to develop large terrain areas, over 10,000 square kilometres (3,900 sq mi) in size (at any terrain resolution) and populate the terrain area with millions of objects in accordance with VMAP shape data, and then texture-map the entire representation with high-resolution satellite imagery or aerial photography.
Once the terrain representation is exported into VBS2, the simulation engine will provide a simulation of the real world, incorporating moving trees and grass, ground clutter, ambient animal life, shadows, dynamic lighting, weather and time of day.
A new streaming capability provides an efficient means of loading complex terrain areas as object and texture data is processed only when required. View distances are now typically five times greater than in VBS1 (depending on processor speed) – level of detail culling has been improved to allow attack helicopters and armoured vehicles to engage at realistic ranges, and forward observers to call artillery fire from greater distances.
Features
VBS2 supports large multiplayer network sessions allowing join-in-progress and improved administrator functionality. VBS2 provides improved simulation of complex urban areas, including destructible buildings, round penetration through walls and operable and destructible doors. Weapon platforms are capable of thermal imaging, simulation of fire control systems and turret override. Multiple vehicle turrets are possible. Weapon ballistics have been improved.
The After-Action-Review module allows detailed review of a completed training mission, with every player, AI, vehicle movement being recorded, as well as any bullet path and any destruction to objects or terrain.
The VBS2 terrain editing tool, Visitor 3, will support direct import of terrain and shape data to recreate any area of operation in the simulation. VBS2 also includes real-time command and control functionality for large numbers of AI or human participants.
The VBS1 HLA/DIS gateway is updated and improved for VBS2 to meet HLA and DIS compliance.
History
In 2001, Bohemia Interactive Australia (BIA) was formed to take Operation Flashpoint and develop a militarised version suitable for Tactical training. By late 2001, the US Marine Corps was provided an alpha version of VBS1 and from their feedback, the after actions review (AAR) tool was added. The Australian Army used VBS1 for experimentation in 2003 and training trials in 2004 with the software being accepted, in 2005, as an Infantry and combined arms operations training tool. In 2006 Calytrix Technologies developed LVCGame as a HLA and DIS gateway for VBS to allow constructive simulation entities and VBS entities to interact in wider exercises. VBS2 was released in beta in early 2007 and trialed as part of the ADF's Combined Arms Tactical Training (CATT) events. BIA then used feedback from both the ADF and USMC to finalize VBS2 throughout 2007 with the Virtual Tool Kit addition being released in 2008.[2] In January 2009 the United States Army announced a new training program of record called Games for Training (GFT). VBS2 was selected as the first person simulation flagship for the GFT program. This announcement replaced a DARPA initiative known as DARWARS Ambush! Convoy Simulator which was subsequently retired as a training tool. Games for Training is currently managed by the TRADOC Capability Manager Gaming, located at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
VBS2 customers
- Australian Defence Force[3]
- Canadian Forces[4]
- Finnish Defence Forces
- French Armed Forces[5]
- NATO members[6]
- New Zealand Defence Force[3]
- Royal Netherlands Army, Maneuver Instruction and Training Center/Ground Maneuver School at Amersfoort (OTCMAN)[7]
- Parallel & Distributed Computing Center, Nanyang Technological University[8]
- Singapore Armed Forces[9]
- United Kingdom Ministry of Defence[10][11] Also released as JCOVE Lite with UK units and distributed as a recruitment tool.
- United States Army[12][13]
- United States Army John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School[14]
- United States Marine Corps[15]
- United States Secret Service[16]
- United States Military Academy, West Point[17]
Developers and Distributors
VBS2 was developed by Bohemia Interactive Australia (now known as Bohemia Interactive Simulations, spinoff company of former Bohemia Interactive Studio (now known as Bohemia Interactive).
VBS2 since version 1.40 are under development by Bohemia Interactive Simulations (abbrev BISIM), which is separate company to/from Bohemia Interactive (abbrev. BI).
See also
- ArmA: Armed Assault
- ArmA 2
- ARMA 3
- Operation Flashpoint: Cold War Crisis
- DARWARS Ambush! Convoy Simulator
- Virtual battlefield
- VBS1
- Serious game
- Pointman (user interface)
References
- ↑ Bohemia Interactive announces the official release of VBS2
- ↑ "SimTecT 2007 - The Evolution of 1st-Person Trainers: A Case-Study with VBS and HLA Integration". Simulationaustralia.org.au. 2007-01-17. Retrieved 2013-08-15.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 VBS2 to be rolled out across the Australian and New Zealand Defence Defence Forces under an Enterprise License arrangement
- ↑ Air Force announces VBS2 (Link broken)
- ↑ French Armed Forces
- ↑ Bohemia Interactive selected to develop ‘VBS NATO’, a custom version of VBS2
- ↑ Royal Netherlands Army announces VBS2 (Link broken)
- ↑ Crowd Simulations For Military Operations
- ↑ Teens teaching SAF new tactics
- ↑ Bohemia Interactive announces United Kingdom Ministry of Defence VBS2 Enterprise License
- ↑ BBC:Real lessons from virtual battle
- ↑ Army paying $17.7M for training game
- ↑ US Army selects VBS2 for Enterprise License
- ↑ Bohemia Interactive announces USAJFKSWCS VBS Site License
- ↑ Bohemia Interactive announces United States Marine Corps (USMC) VBS2 Enterprise License
- ↑ "Secret Service Site Security Training Gains a High-Tech Edge | Homeland Security". Dhs.gov. 1999-02-22. Retrieved 2013-08-15.
- ↑ "Learning To Choose the Right Path | Defense News". defensenews.com. Retrieved 2013-08-15.
External links
- Official VBS2 website
- Virtual Battlespace 2 Technology Trailer
- BBC news article, about its use to train troops in Iraq and Afghanistan
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