Player Guide/SRS: Difference between revisions
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Player Guide import 2026-05-17 (VRSWiki repo, content/pages/) Tag: Manual revert |
→Setting your callsign in DCS: comment to include that on newer versions of SRS, entering a callsign/name is not necessary as it is picked up from the DCS MP server. |
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'''Important:''' the name you set in SRS '''must match''' your in-game DCS name. Several VRS services (Focus, CSAR, the stats site) identify you by name, and a mismatch will make you invisible to them. | '''Important:''' the name you set in SRS '''must match''' your in-game DCS name. Several VRS services (Focus, CSAR, the stats site) identify you by name, and a mismatch will make you invisible to them. | ||
If the version of SRS you are running doesn't have this option, (a place to type in your callsign) it will be automatically derived from what you have entered in the Name field in the server browser. | |||
== Setting your callsign in DCS == | == Setting your callsign in DCS == | ||
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Make sure the name you type matches what you'll connect to SRS as - it's the same string, just entered in two places. | Make sure the name you type matches what you'll connect to SRS as - it's the same string, just entered in two places. | ||
If the version of SRS you are running doesn't have this option, (a place to type in your callsign) it will be automatically derived from what you have entered in the Name field in the server browser. | |||
== Choosing your callsign == | == Choosing your callsign == | ||
A good VRS callsign is structured so that the [[Player Guide/SkyEye|Focus GCI bot]] can | A good VRS callsign is structured so that the [[Player Guide/SkyEye|Focus GCI bot]] can recognize it reliably over voice. Pick a name like <code>Mobius 1 | Reaper</code> or <code>Hitman 11 | Monarch</code> - that is: | ||
# A '''2-3 syllable English word''' (the callsign itself). | # A '''2-3 syllable English word''' (the callsign itself). | ||
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* Numbers are pronounced individually: <code>Spare 15</code> is said <em>"Spare One Five"</em>, not <em>"Spare Fifteen"</em>. | * Numbers are pronounced individually: <code>Spare 15</code> is said <em>"Spare One Five"</em>, not <em>"Spare Fifteen"</em>. | ||
* Content inside <code>[]</code> is ignored - <code>[VRS] Mobius 1</code> reads as <code>Mobius 1</code>. | * Content inside <code>[]</code> is ignored - <code>[VRS] Mobius 1</code> reads as <code>Mobius 1</code>. | ||
* Callsigns are | * Callsigns are normalized in capitalization, numbers, and separation - <code>WARDOG 14</code>, <code>Wardog 14</code>, <code>wardog14</code>, and <code>Wardog 1 4</code> all count as the same callsign. | ||
* Your callsign should be unique within a server. Duplicates will get inconsistent responses from Focus. | * Your callsign should be unique within a server. Duplicates will get inconsistent responses from Focus. | ||
Revision as of 16:55, 27 May 2026
SRS (DCS Simple Radio Standalone) is the third-party voice radio layer DCS players use to talk to each other and to the AI services on the server. VRS uses SRS for coalition voice comms, for the Focus GCI bot, for CSAR coordination, and more.
If you intend to fly on VRS, you need SRS installed and running alongside DCS.
Installing SRS
Download SRS from the official releases page and run the installer. SRS only needs to be installed once; on launch it will offer to install or update the in-game DCS plugin as well.
Connecting to the VRS SRS server
Open SRS, then in the connection bar at the top enter:
server.victorromeosierra.com:10220
Hit Connect. Once connected, SRS will sit in the background and route radio audio through your aircraft's tuned frequencies. With the in-game plugin installed, you can change frequencies in the cockpit and SRS will follow.
Important: the name you set in SRS must match your in-game DCS name. Several VRS services (Focus, CSAR, the stats site) identify you by name, and a mismatch will make you invisible to them.
If the version of SRS you are running doesn't have this option, (a place to type in your callsign) it will be automatically derived from what you have entered in the Name field in the server browser.
Setting your callsign in DCS
Your "callsign" on VRS is just your DCS multiplayer name - what you set in the DCS server browser before joining. This is the name that appears on the in-game scoreboard, in the chat window, in Tacview, and to every server-side service.
To set it:
- Launch DCS World.
- Click MULTIPLAYER.
- In the server browser, find the Name field at the top.
- Type your callsign in the format
Callsign 1 | yourname(see Choosing your callsign below). - Join the VRS server.
Make sure the name you type matches what you'll connect to SRS as - it's the same string, just entered in two places.
If the version of SRS you are running doesn't have this option, (a place to type in your callsign) it will be automatically derived from what you have entered in the Name field in the server browser.
Choosing your callsign
A good VRS callsign is structured so that the Focus GCI bot can recognize it reliably over voice. Pick a name like Mobius 1 | Reaper or Hitman 11 | Monarch - that is:
- A 2-3 syllable English word (the callsign itself).
- 1-3 digits (the flight number).
- A pipe character (
|). - Your normal username, after the pipe.
A few rules of thumb:
- Each digit is worth 2-3 letters in error correction - do not skip the numbers.
- Numbers are pronounced individually:
Spare 15is said "Spare One Five", not "Spare Fifteen". - Content inside
[]is ignored -[VRS] Mobius 1reads asMobius 1. - Callsigns are normalized in capitalization, numbers, and separation -
WARDOG 14,Wardog 14,wardog14, andWardog 1 4all count as the same callsign. - Your callsign should be unique within a server. Duplicates will get inconsistent responses from Focus.
Avoid:
- Names that sound like brevity codewords: alpha, radio, comm, bogey, picture, declare, snaplock, spiked, bullseye. For example, "Spade" can be misheard as "SPIKE".
- Names that sound similar to numbers - "Knight" sounds like "Nine", "Fort" sounds like "Four".
- Hard-to-distinguish pairs - "Spare" vs "Spear", "Jester" vs "Gesture", "Witch" vs "Which".
- Names that aren't widely recognised English words - "Razgriz", "Beskar". The bot will try, but is less accurate.
- Names without digits. The bot will try, but the digits make a very large difference in error correction.
- Very short callsigns (2-3 characters). A single misheard letter is uncorrectable.
- Names in poor taste.
If you fly with a regular wingman, both of you using strict callsigns - a word plus exactly two digits - lets Focus combine calls for the whole flight into one transmission. For example, Marauder One flight, threat bullseye 070/20... instead of naming every aircraft individually.
What VRS uses SRS for
| Service | Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Coalition voice comms | varies | Talk to your wingman and other players on the same frequency. |
| Focus (AI GCI bot) | 251.00 AM, 133.00 AM | See the SkyEye page for how to talk to Focus. |
| CSAR | 30.00 FM | Helo recovery channel. |
Troubleshooting
SRS won't connect. Double-check the server address and port (server.victorromeosierra.com:10220). Confirm you can reach the VRS website in a browser - if the website is also down, the server may be restarting.
Other players can't hear you, or you can't hear them. Check that SRS is connected (not just running), check that your push-to-talk key is bound in SRS Settings, and check that you're tuned to the same frequency. The in-game plugin only works if you've enabled it in DCS - the SRS installer should have handled this automatically.
Focus or CSAR doesn't see you. Confirm that the name you set in SRS matches your DCS multiplayer name exactly, including capitalisation and the pipe-separated suffix.
See also
- SkyEye - the Focus GCI bot, what to say, request types.
- CSAR and Salvage - Combat Search and Rescue procedures.
- DCS-SimpleRadioStandalone on GitHub - source, releases, documentation.