"Beep beep beep—! Warning! Warning! Locked by fire control radar! Bearing 035, altitude 21,000, distance 30 miles! Model identification... high threat! Suspected Russian-made 'Snow Leopard'-E passive phased array radar!"
The sharp and urgent radar alert sounded in the cockpit of "Poison Snake 1-1".
On the screen, the bright red symbol representing the highest level of threat was fixed on the coordinates at bearing 035, altitude 21,000 feet, 40 miles away.
The scrolling "Snow Leopard-E" model identification characters beside it added several times the weight of this threat.
Every pilot trained in rigorous air defense suppression knows what "Snow Leopard-E" means—that it's standard equipment on the top-tier Sukhoi family fighter, the Su-35S, with ultra-long-range detection capability exceeding 400 kilometers, and the horrifying ability to simultaneously track and attack multiple targets.
Being locked on by it is almost like having one foot in the grave.
"SHIT! What the hell?!"
