IXEG 737-300 Classic , a premier payware aircraft for X-Plane, features a vast library of user-created and official liveries that span historical, modern, and fictional categories. The community has meticulously developed these skins to maintain the high-fidelity standards of the model's 3D exterior. Core Community Resources
Sera stood with Marcus at the simulated fence line and listened to the chatter in the comms: people remembering flights with loved ones, calling out historic colorways, and sharing tips on texture mapping. Marcus felt something like old airshow pride. "We didn't just make skins," he said. "We made memory." ixeg 737300 liveries
The IXEG 737-300 is XP11 native but works in XP12 with some caveats: IXEG 737-300 Classic , a premier payware aircraft
Locate the Folder: Navigate to your X-Plane directory: Aircraft/X-Aviation/IXEG 737 Classic/liveries/. Unzip: Download your desired livery and unzip the contents. Marcus felt something like old airshow pride
One of IXEG’s most ambitious projects was the "Commuter Redux" series. They asked themselves: what if a 737-300 had been optimized for five-year short-haul loops in dense urban networks—small stair trucks, brisk turnarounds, and daily grind? The livery reflected this lifestyle: scuffed lower fuselage, reinforced paint near boarding doors, and cheerful, high-visibility nose art for easy gate recognition. Their art director designed an IP-free mascot: a stylized winged clock called Tempo. The Tempo liveries were wildly popular in the sim community; pilots enjoyed the visual cues that made quick taxiways and busy terminals feel alive. Players in multiplayer servers started using Tempo-marked jets as flying beacons for group flights, a sign of community.
Modern flight simulation has moved beyond sterile, showroom-fresh paint. The best IXEG 737-300 liveries incorporate weathering. This includes exhaust stains trailing from the APU outlet, gray-soaked flaps, chipped paint around the cockpit windshield wipers, and oil streaks down the landing gear struts. A clean livery looks nice on a monitor, but a weathered one tells a story—suggesting the aircraft has just finished a week of short-haul flights across Europe or the United States.
IXEG House Colors: A sleek, blue-and-white promotional scheme used for marketing the "Take Command!" series.