Verm, Nath; There were no day-fighter Mosquitoes - the only one labelled as such, the F.II, was actually a night-fighter.
The closest thing to a day-fighter was the fighter-bomber FB.VI, the most numerous of all the Mosquito marques with 2248 built.
If the Mosquito was added you could easily have several useful planes in one.
FB.VI - 1942 fighter-bomber with 2000lb bombload, 8 rockets and 4x20mm/4x.303in.
B.IV - 1942 low-altitude bomber with 2000lb bombload. (241 built)
B.XVI - 1944 high-altitude bomber with 4000lb bombload. (1200 built) PS: It does 400mph at 15k iirc, not at sea level!!!
BUT - the
P1Y1 would be nicer first since it's IJN and never seen before.
Btw; that "purple" Mosquito is a PR.XVI of the US 8th Air Force, 653rd Bomb Sqn(Light). The crimson tail indicates that it's mission is weather reconnaissance.
Another thing; there were 10 "civil" BOAC Mosquitoes(1 B.IV, 9 FB.VI) that were in use during the war, carrying urgent "passengers" and "cargo" over Europe.
