Google Earth has a hidden flight simulator that lets users explore the planet from the sky using a virtual aircraft. While many people only recently discovered it through social media, the feature has existed in Google Earth’s desktop version for years and has now also been made accessible on the web.
It’s not a hardcore aviation simulator. Instead, it’s a lightweight, exploratory flying mode built for fun, letting users glide over cities, mountains, and oceans using real satellite imagery and 3D terrain.
A hidden feature that existed for years
The flight simulator is not new.
It originally existed in Google Earth Pro (desktop version) as a built-in feature that could be activated through the Tools menu or keyboard shortcuts.
According to Google’s help documentation, users can launch it by selecting:
Tools → Enter Flight Simulator, or using shortcuts like Ctrl + Alt + A (Windows) or Cmd + Option + A (Mac).
Once inside, users can choose an aircraft, pick a starting location, and begin flying over real-world geography.
Now available on the web
What made it recently go viral is a major update: the feature is now also accessible through Google Earth on the browser, removing the need to install desktop software.
Recent reporting confirms that users can access it by:
- Opening Google Earth on the web
- Clicking “Explore Earth”
- Selecting Flight Simulator under the Tools menu
This makes it far more accessible to casual users, especially those who never used the desktop version.
What the experience is actually like
Despite the name, this is not a realistic aviation simulator like Microsoft Flight Simulator.
Instead, it is designed as a casual exploration tool.
You fly over:
- Satellite imagery
- 3D cities and terrain
- Real-world geography streamed from Google Earth
The controls are simple:
- Page Up / Page Down → throttle
- Arrow keys → pitch and turn
- Keyboard or mouse for navigation
The experience is intentionally lightweight, making it more of a “fly-for-fun” mode than a technical simulation.
Not a game, but not fully realistic either
Google has positioned the feature as an accessible way to explore Earth from above, not as a professional simulator.
While it uses real geographic data, it does not simulate detailed aerodynamics or real-world flight systems.
Reports describe it as:
- Fun and exploratory
- Easy to access
- Less complex than dedicated flight simulators
In short, it sits somewhere between a map tool and a casual flying experience.
Why it’s trending now
The renewed attention comes from its availability in-browser.
Previously, users had to install Google Earth Pro on desktop. Now, it runs directly in Chrome or Edge, lowering the barrier for casual users and making it easier to try instantly.
That accessibility is what pushed it back into viral discussions, especially on TikTok and Reddit.
Final takeaway
Google Earth’s flight simulator isn’t a new invention, but its shift from desktop-only to browser-accessible tool has given it a second life online.
It’s not a professional simulator, and it’s not a game in the traditional sense.
But it does something simple very well:
It lets anyone fly across the real world, no license required.
Source: Google Help, Tom’s Guide, The Verge, Windows Central








