How do standoff SCLs work?

Flights with an SCL containing multiple munitions will standoff at a distance from the target equal to the greatest standoff distance listed for the SCL in SCL_Weapon. All munitions planned against the target will be applied/adjudicated from that point--even the ones with shorter standoff range--as if the Flight had flown to the standoff range for each of the munitions. For example, if the AGM-123 had a standoff range of 20 km and the GBU-3x has a standoff range of 10 km, the Flight will plan and fly to a point along its flight path 20 km from that target, call the adjudicator, and apply all of its applicable munitions from that point.

How does the Flight know to plan to fly to a standoff location, rather than overflight? The “Standoff” Y/N flag (in SCL_Weapon table) for one of the munitions in the SCL is set to “Y”.

What if the Standoff flag is “N”, but the Standoff distance is set to some value > 0? The Flight will plan to overfly the target, rather than standoff from the target.

What standoff distance will the Flight use? The greatest of the standoff distances in the SCL. NOTE: For standoff SCLs, any munition with a Nil value for standoff range will cause the simulation to break. When comparing standoff ranges to determine standoff distance, comparing a positive distance to a Nil will cause a break.