MrGoldfinger
RM
Heinkel He 100 and... offcourse F-4 Phantom!!!

This.I was very surprised the Zero wasn't in that list. The high versatility, combined with the, plain and simple, better design that wasn't matched until around the end of the war, along with the usability even when outdated makes it a pretty good plane, in my opinion.
I was very surprised the Zero wasn't in that list. The high versatility, combined with the, plain and simple, better design that wasn't matched until around the end of the war, along with the usability even when outdated makes it a pretty good plane, in my opinion.
Me-262 (1944): It was the first operational jet aircraft and when introduced, there was nothing like it. None of the conventional fighter aircraft of the time came close. In the hands of an equally skilled pilot, the Me-262 was the superior aircraft. It was close, but I couldn't quite give it the nod due to the poor quality of German pilots by this point in the war. The combat range of this aircraft also held it back. You didn't have to shoot it down. You just had to wait about ten minutes.
F-14 Tomcat (1974): When introduced, the F-14 Tomcat had no equal. I don't think that the MiG-23, MiG-25, or the Su-11 were any match whatever. It was a superior aircraft for the time, with superior quality and performance in every area possible, and would still remain among the elite aircraft of the world today, if it were still employed.
By the time the better allied fighters had appeared the Japanese had already depleted their elite class of experienced highly trained pilots and all they had left were raw recruits who got very basic and expedited training compared to their American counterparts. I believe this had more to do with the downfall of the Zero than the deficiencies in its design.
US victories relied on skill, tactics and an unending supply of consistently well trained (yet expendable) pilots rather than superior machines.
Once opposing pilots ceased to fly by the Zero's rules, the Zero stopped being dominant.