United States Air Force | Royal Air Force | Royal Canadian Air Force | Indian Air Force | United States Air Force Academy | X-Force | Royal Australian Air Force | First Australian Imperial Force | Guiding Light | Israeli Air Force | French Air Force | Edwards Air Force Base | Electric Light Orchestra | light rail | Edmonton Light Rail Transit | First Air Force | South African Air Force | Wright-Patterson Air Force Base | Argentine Air Force | Air Force One | light curve | Eighth Air Force | Philippine Air Force | Pakistan Air Force | Light-emitting diode | Cape Canaveral Air Force Station | Australian Defence Force | Second Air Force | Russian Air Force | Royal New Zealand Air Force |
The flip-screen technique was particularly common in PC games originally made for the ZX Spectrum, such as Atic Atac, Jet Set Willy, and Starquake, due in part to the Spectrum's display limitations which meant that full colour scrolling was difficult to implement convincingly - Light Force being a notable exception.
The first Mobile Light Force was a PlayStation version of Gunbird, while Mobile Light Force 2 was the PlayStation 2 version of Shikigami No Shiro.