Maritime law enforcement simulation
Patrol missions combine navigation, identification, communication and judgement under changing conditions. A simulator gives teams a controlled space to practise actions that are difficult to repeat safely at sea.
At Wuhan Erun Technology Co., Ltd., ERUN approaches this topic as a practical simulator-design question: how to connect maritime scenarios, instructor workflow and measurable trainee behaviour in one usable training environment.

What the programme should cover
- Practise patrol routes, interception and vessel approach
- Include communications with command and supporting units
- Train evidence coordination and decision records
- Debrief safety distances, timing and role clarity
ERUN perspective
ERUN designs simulator projects around instructor control, repeatable scenarios, trainee workload and post-exercise debriefing. The goal is to make each exercise visible, measurable and useful for the next training decision.
Mission simulation supports disciplined response before the mission environment becomes complex.
Where it fits
This topic is relevant for maritime academies, ports, fleet training centres and organisations planning a simulator room, a specialist workstation lab or an integrated maritime training system.