Hey Stoggie, I played AW for about 5 years or so. I went from paying per hour to a flat rate. When I stopped playing, they were losing steam and rumors abounded that War Birds was going to take over. I don't remember the version
I remember, Subby was the best pilot in the game those days.
I can't wait to get set up to play but it might take some time to piece a computer together.
Thanks for the report of the number of players in the arenas. It sounds like I have found the right place!! I look forward to learning everything from scratch again.
It sounds like you might have been playing around the same time that I started AW. Couple of guys in my squad might disagree with your Subby statement however

Now after AW died I had a ten year layoff from sims (that damned real life got in the way), and have just come back here about two years ago. Based on my experience getting back in:
If you flew in FR (like I did) you won't find that operating the planes and keeping them airborne is much harder really, that part should come right back to you like riding a bicycle. The really nasty bit will be re-acquiring your SA and ACM. You'll find that those are more like high level math, they fade away when you don't use them. Once you start to get a slightly better handle on that, then you'll start to be able to read the map better and find the kinds of fights you're looking for. You'll just start to feel confident when someone will seriously hand you your bellybutton in the arena. That's when you'll realize that your gunnery is terrible, and your timing is not great and you just have tons of stuff to work on to be competent again. Then you will seek a trainer, and that will help. They are great.
What I'm saying here is that yes, there will be a learning curve for you, but, provided you flew AW in FR, it won't be as bad as it would be for a stone noob, even with the long layoff. You can seriously cut into that curve if you start with the trainer, instead of going through everything that I did. Hell, I'm still not good, but I've come a long way in nearly two years. You can do it!