Virtual airlines

Passenger cabin immersion for virtual airlines

AnyAirline adds branded-style cabin announcements, passenger IFE and cabin ambience on top of your existing virtual airline workflow.

Not a VA management system

AnyAirline does not replace vAMSYS, ACARS, Volanta, SimBrief, dispatch, schedules or logbooks. It adds the passenger cabin layer that those systems usually do not cover.

  • Branded virtual airline announcement flows.
  • Event flight and group flight cabin setup.
  • Passenger IFE map links for viewers or community members.

Where it fits

Use your VA or dispatch tool for operations, then use AnyAirline to turn the route into passenger-facing cabin audio, ambience and map context.

VA passenger layer

Where cabin immersion fits in a virtual airline workflow

Virtual airlines already manage schedules, reports and community operations. Cabin immersion adds the passenger-facing side.

A VA flight is more than a logbook entry

Virtual airlines are excellent at giving pilots routes, fleets, events and a sense of shared operation. But the passenger side can still be missing. A flight may be logged correctly while the cabin itself remains silent and generic. Announcements, ambience and IFE links add a layer that passengers would actually notice.

This does not replace dispatch, ACARS or schedules. It complements them. Operational tools answer what the pilot flew. Cabin immersion answers what the flight felt like.

That distinction is important for groups. A pilot can keep using the VA's normal reporting rules while adding a more polished passenger experience for events, streams or flagship routes. The cabin layer becomes a presentation layer rather than a new operations system.

Consistency helps group identity

A virtual airline can feel more cohesive when members use a consistent cabin tone. Similar boarding style, arrival wording, music mood or IFE presentation can make flights feel connected even when different pilots fly different routes.

That consistency does not have to be rigid. A holiday charter, regional hop and long-haul event can each have their own tone while still belonging to the same group. Templates and shared assets help make that possible.

Shared maps make events easier to follow

During group flights, a passenger-style map can make the event visible to viewers and members who are not in every cockpit. People can follow active routes, see progress and open a shared IFE view when the pilot allows it.

That turns the VA from a private pilot workflow into a more public community experience. It gives non-flying members something to watch and makes streamed events easier to understand.

The passenger layer should stay optional

Not every VA flight needs a full cabin production. Training flights, testing sessions and quick repositioning legs may stay simple. The value is in having the option to add passenger polish when the route, event or audience deserves it.

AnyAirline is built to sit on top of existing VA workflows, not to take them over. Pilots can keep their dispatch and reporting tools while adding a cabin experience that makes selected flights feel more complete.

Free vs paid

Start free, upgrade when you need cloud AI

A free account is required for AnyAirline. The free local English cabin voice is useful on its own; paid AI credits add cloud generation and advanced cabin flows.

Free account

Free local English cabin voice, workshop access, and basic connector usage.

Paid AI credits

Cloud AI voices, multilingual generation, custom airline and route announcements, advanced templates, and premium cabin flows.

Transparent limits

Credits are used for AI audio generation. The local English cabin voice remains the free baseline.