A version for Thomson computers was published in 1985 by FIL in France with the title Vol Solo.
[5] Solo Flight consists of two parts: a pure flying simulation and a game mode called Mail Pilot.
[6] The top half of the screen shows the plane being flown in third person, while the bottom portion contains instruments.
[6] ANALOG Computing editor Lee Pappas wrote, "the graphics are somewhat rough, and the control panel is not up to what it should be (there is no stall indicator, and non-standard VORS)," but still concluded, "As a whole, Solo Flight is the best Atari flight simulator published to date.
reviewer Arthur Leyenberger praised both the simulation and game aspects of Solo Flight.