I’ve never been an airplane person. I think that’s because throughout my life, most of my experiences with planes have been me in a tight seat with an inflated ticket price, no legroom, dubious ergonomics, and a bunch of people who should have stayed home. (I’m looking at you, lady with no shoes on and guy who didn’t flush the toilet.) But my friends and I travel a lot now, and I find that as we orbit the age of 30, we have become obsessively interested in two things: birds and planes.
For a few months, I had my plane obsession under control. I’d occasionally look stuff up on Wikipedia, like the rarity of a Boeing Dreamlifter or the story of Tex Johnston’s unpermitted 1955 barrel roll during a test flight in a commercial jet. Other than that, my craving for plane knowledge wasn’t taking over my life.


Then, a friend texted me a link to a new phone app: Skycards, which turns data from popular plane tracker Flight Radar into Pokémon Go for airplanes. My plane obsession is no longer under control.
I’ve only been an airplane fan for a few months now, and I would describe my level of knowledge as “a child who just got their first book on the topic.” I can look at a plane in the sky, say “Bombardier CRJ-700,” then look at Flight Radar and confirm I’m correct. I can also see certain special aircraft, like the Antonov AN-124 Ruslan cargo carrier, and say: “That is a very rare and large plane that can load through the nose. Also, Antonov is a Ukrainian manufacturer that made the AN-225 Mriya, which was the world’s largest plane before Russia destroyed it a few years ago.”
Skycards is making me even more obsessed. It’s a new app by Flight Radar, and the premise is simple: The app has a radar circle around your current location, and you’re able to “catch” planes in that circle.
There are five color-coded categories of planes on the map, based on how many models exist: common, uncommon, scarce, rare, and ultra. You catch a plane by taking a virtual-reality photo of it, and your “camera film” reloads with five photos every 20 minutes or so. You can buy coins for more features, but there are currently no ads.
Every time you catch a plane flying to a new airport, you “unlock” the ability to travel to that airport and catch planes with coins you earn. Every time you catch a new plane, you get a trading card for that plane. You’re then able to use your deck of cards to “battle” other users in categories like longest wingspan, earliest flight, most seats, highest speed, and more.
You can also look at any plane on the map, whether it’s in your circle or not, and open “Airpedia”: a list of stats about the plane, like its first flight, dimensions, max speed, flight ceiling, seats, rarity, and total number of aircraft in the world. Some planes have thousands of models. Some have just one.
For me, every function of the app is enjoyable: battling people; collecting new planes; finding rare planes; and even seeing a plane overhead, opening the app, and immediately being able to look at its stats. I get to interact with real, live planes and flights, both thousands of miles away and right over my head. It rocks.
I downloaded Skycards less than a week ago. Since then, I’ve caught 353 distinct makes and models of airplane and unlocked 164 airports. I virtually travel to Oshkosh, Wisconsin daily because there are tons of rare military planes there, and I have multiple group and individual text chains about the app.
“We should take a trip to Oshkosh for real,” one of my friends said today.
Before I could say “Yes,” which was my answer, I sent an urgent screenshot of a rare, one-of-16 plane and said: “At Oshkosh right now.”
I’m even tracking a plane locally as I type this, because it’s a rare one that’s about to enter my radar. I don’t want to virtually miss it. (It’s also coming toward my house, and I’ll run outside if it flies overhead.)
I can’t pinpoint why I’ve become such an airplane person. Maybe it’s because my friend group travels a lot, and our frequent-flyer statuses give us access to slightly more comfortable seats. Maybe it’s because we’ve spent three decades on the ground and are now fascinated by the miracle of flight. Maybe there’s just a chemical in the body that develops at age 30 and gives you hobbies like planes, trains, and birds. (I already have automobiles.)
Whatever the reason, my newfound fascination with planes is so gripping that I’m glued to Skycards.
The thing about being new to a passion is that there’s always something to discover. You don’t have to dig deeper and deeper every time you want to learn something new, because everything is new. When everything is new, the world is a little more interesting.
So, yes, I can identify that CRJ-700 flying by right now. I can’t tell you much about it, and I certainly can’t fly it, but I am working on it.
Ask me again in a few years — once I’m done with my Skycards session, of course.
Oh my god. I love cars, but my love of planes is even greater. How have I not found this app before now. You have ruined my life!!! I have 6 major airports within 100 miles and major European airways that fly directly over my house. Damnit.
This is the gateway drug. Next, you’ll want to try Microsoft Flight Simulator — Which is easy enough to do with a cheap or even free trial of Game Pass. And playable even with cloud gaming like Nvidia and Xbox offer, so no fancy PC needed to get hooked.
In another year you’ll be building an A380 cockpit in your spare bedroom…
OMG, please get that phone on a charger!!!
I live within the approach area for CVG and I suspect that it would just be the same planes over and over again. I can already ID all the DHL flights by the color of the plane, and with Delta being based there I guess I’d quickly run through the “variety”. Now, if I could spend more time around LUK, I might get a more interesting mix – blimp, WWII, Air Force 2, etc.
“Birds”? You mean surveillance drones? Are they in this app too?
I was addicted to FlightRadar some time back. There is a lot of stuff you can do. You can see just how many private and public planes are contributing to climate change. You can see military training T-38s. Helicopters that appear in the mid Atlantic on their way to Sao Paolo (from ships). Police choppers circling around LA. All sorts of fun stuff.
The only interesting plane I was in was the B-2 when it was in development, but I can’t tell you why.
For ships, I got to be on the deck of the Sea Shadow (RIP) when at port.
I wonder who’s harvesting the data
Wasn’t Pokemon Go exposed as a mapping data scam?
Blank Spots on the Map is worth checking out.
Not exactly a scam, but yes they were using it for other purposes
https://arstechnica.com/ai/2024/11/niantic-uses-pokemon-go-player-data-to-build-ai-navigation-system/
They sent crowds to dangerous neighborhoods and alligator infested rivers.
But not everything they did was funny
I live right under one of the approaches for my local airport. I am so toast
SAME! I see all sorts of cool stuff going overhead. They occasionally do some sort of stunt-plane training at our local airfield and I see a lot of cool prop planes.
omg i’m going to be up all night
I too have plane, train and auto-tism, so this game seems right up my alley. Side note I had no idea you were writing here now – sweet! Any recent bobs guy sightings? Haven’t seen any updates in a month or two lol.
I don’t have the time to play this game, but it sounds fun.
I have a (fixed wing) pilot’s license and used to own a 1/4 share of a C-150. It was just about the cheapest way to fly. But airspace got so messy after 9/11 and even at its cheapest, it’s an expensive habit.
I still look up when I hear prop planes. I can usually identify what it is by sound, before I see it.
I live three blocks from a hospital with a helipad. There are three different medevac services and can instantly determine by sound, whether it’s an EC 135 or a Bell 407 bringing in someone who’s having a very bad day. Hughes/MD 500s also have a very distinct sound, but those don’t have enough cabin space for a patient and flight nurse.
I can identify most military helicopters by sound as well, but all of them.
I refuse to install this. It will be another way to waste my time. Or a good reason to build a DIY ADS-B receiver.
What does having a ADS-B receiver let you do? Anything different than Flightradar24?
I’m an avgeek but my hobbies skew toward flight simulation and RC.
Nothing much, but honestly, it is just cool. It is not a matter of having the information, it is building something that can capture it. My hobbies skew towards the eletronics tinkering, specially with radio protocols, so I am curious about it.
That does sound cool. I’ve been building PCs for over 20 years, so I like tinkering too.
I love this.
One of my favorite kid memories was my uncle taking me ‘backstage’ at Hartsfield airport (Pre-Jackson). I got to ride in his Triumph TR-6 (and an F150) all over the runways, see the planes up close, and the ones in maintenance. I got a picture standing in a 707(?) engine! Sadly that was 1998, and it would never fly today.
“Clueless but passionate” describes me, but that’s why I’m here.
I enjoy planes, much on the same level as cars, but just like my enjoyment of boats, I don’t have the same interest in experiencing them as I do cars. But put me near a airplane museum and watch me become a giddy little kid again.
When I was a kid, my dad used to tell me he could read the numbers on the underside of any plane we could see in the sky, no matter how high it was. It wasn’t until I was older that I realized he was full of crap and was just making up whatever he wanted because we had no way of confirming what he said.
Your phone battery level gives me anxiety
I actually have a friend who texts me regularly to charge my phone. I always let it get to like 3 percent before charging
If I dip below 50% I panic. I go out for a day with friends and stick a MagSafe pack in my other pocket just in case.
Same 50% Is closer to 25% in reality. 10% on a older phone is more like the the last 10min.
I’m intrigued that it was clearly on life support at 1:02 and in the 1:23 shot you can see she has it on the charger, but by 2:10 it’s back off and probably around 5%. Does she only use the bottom 10% of the battery capacity?
Ok, time waster. Being right near three major and and a dozen small airports, I’ve got a bunch of types already.
Heck yeah
120 types caught so far. (slow day at work)
You’re right about it being tied to travel. Especially with so many travel sites telling you what the plane is for a given flight. What started as “hell no I’m not taking a 737MAX” has grown into “who can I fly to get an opportunity to fly on a 747?” (And yes, it’s likely Lufthansa.)
YEP
They’re big. Cool to think about but at the end of the day another flying sardine can for those of us in steerage
Wait so you just find them in flightradar? you don’t gotta take a physical photo of it?
You do not need a physical photo.
yeah I justy downloaded to try, still neat but that’s not as cool in my brain. But I also live by tons of planes
I work RIGHT next to a regional airport, in the flight path of 4-6 other airports, and 20 miles from a large international airport… I have PLANES FOR DAYS. I also work in aerospace, and used to work at the Experimental Flight Test department, so this stuff is incredibly interesting to me.
This game has been a terrible addiction for me. I’m currently doing this thing where I’m catching planes in the game and then I try to find them on the ground here at OSH.
I wish I had a second phone on me because I want to get a picture of me catching a Goodyear blimp while I ride in a Goodyear blimp on Friday.
This game is probably bricking most of the cell towers in Oshkosh right now
I’m literally catching Oshkosh planes while you’re at Oshkosh
Catching rare planes within 100 miles of KOSH should come with an asterix during AirVenture.
All are welcome to feed their addiction here:
https://opposite-lock.com/topic/124570/skycards-your-new-favorite-timesuck
Indeed my new favorite time suck
I’ve downloaded that app immediately.
It’s SO fun
Hi, Alanis, this is Mercedes. Mercedes, this is Alanis. GO!
Hahahahaha