Pilot Training Flight Simulator: Roblox Parent Guide

Your kid flies a 747, lands at JFK, and talks on air traffic controller voice chat with strangers who may or may not know how runways work.

Open-world aviation with voice roleplay

Kids pick from 94 aircraft, spawn at one of 23 airports, and practice takeoff, cruise, and landing across a massive map. The **air traffic controller (ATC) voice chat** lets players coordinate landings in real time, and unofficial **airline roleplay groups** run structured sessions in private servers. It is a flight sim first, but the social layer is where parenting happens.

Why kids play Pilot Training Flight Simulator

Fly the mighty An-225

The game delivers 94 real-world aircraft, from the tiny **Piper Cub** to the six-engine **Antonov An-225**. Kids who love planes get to practice pitch, yaw, and throttle with surprisingly realistic physics. It is educational candy.

23 airports, zero loading screens

The entire map is seamless: your kid takes off from **Phoenix Sky Harbor**, cruises over mountains, and lands at **Tokyo Narita** without a single fade to black. That freedom to roam and retry landings hooks the perfectionists.

ATC voice chat roleplay

Older kids can use **ATC voice chat** to call out clearances, taxi instructions, and runway assignments like real pilots and controllers. It turns a solo sim into a live coordination game, and the radio chatter makes them feel like pros.

Airline roleplay community servers

Unofficial groups host **VIP server airline roleplay sessions** where kids play pilot, flight attendant, or passenger on scheduled routes. It is pretend work, complete with boarding announcements and snack-cart service, and some kids love the structure.

What parents should watch for

Voice chat with strangers on the frequency

The **ATC voice chat** is live and unfiltered: any player can tune in and talk. Your kid hears adults, teens, and younger kids all roleplaying (or not), and **voice reveals age, gender, and emotion** in ways text never does. One persistent user can follow them server to server.

Roleplay groups with uneven moderation

**Airline roleplay VIP servers** promise rule enforcement, but quality depends entirely on the group host. Some enforce strict no-toxicity policies, others let older players flirt or joke inappropriately during **passenger cabin scenes**. Your kid may not know which server is safe until they are already in the cabin.

Map is huge, moderation is thin

With 23 airports and open sky, players can land at remote fields and chat privately away from crowded hubs. **Text chat in a parked cockpit** is harder for automated systems to flag than a busy spawn zone. Most kids stay at the big airports, but the quiet corners exist.

Parent takeaway

Pilot Training is a solid flight sim with a voice-chat social layer that needs supervision. The game itself is gentle, the community varies, and the **ATC frequency** exposes your kid to unfiltered voices. Turn off voice chat for under-12s, spot-check the friend list for airline-group recruiters, and ask which airports they like to land at so you know if they are hanging out in the quiet corners.

Read the full Pilot Training Flight Simulator parent guide on Roblox Ready