This whole digital camo thing has gotten completely out of hand. Plus the colors on the Chinese vehicles and the uniform don't make any sense.
The colours though...
Not as bad as the blues shown above but still weird:
I'd be really curious as to what exactly the advantages of pixellated camo as opposed to free hand feathered patterns are supposed to be - to me it seems like a whole lot masking/taping effort for producing unnatural hard rectangular edges. I could see a theoretical advantage in urban settings, but then again the pattern resolution might be too irregular to provide any advantage. What gives?
Then I see the schemes on some Chinese military vehicles:I have to ask: Why even bother?
Remember: If your enemy takes 2 seconds longer to react to you than you do to them, they're the dead ones, not you.
My eyes hurt after looking at this one:
I wonder when they expect the painter(s) to get out of therapy after masking it?
I wouldn't be surprised if this camo is /will be designed to fool not humans, but some of the neural nets used by AIs for image recognition: Why deep-learning AIs are so easy to fool
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Does this count?
(so glad I am no longer in...):
Found on FB.Would like to see how the wings were done and what colors were used.