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Why does Russia’s Su-57 feel so different from Western stealth fighters? Most discussions reduce the Su-57 to radar cross-section numbers or shallow comparisons with the F-22 and F-35. That misses the point entirely. In this video, we explain the Su-57 through a different lens — the panther. Not the biggest predator. Not the quietest. But one of the most dangerous because it adapts, pivots, and survives in contested terrain. We break down: Why the Su-57 was never designed to mirror Western stealth doctrine How Russia prioritizes agility, versatility, and maneuver dominance over absolute invisibility What blended stealth really means — and why a higher RCS is a deliberate tradeoff How thrust vectoring, post-stall control, and high-angle agility shape real combat outcomes The role of sensors like the N036 Byelka radar and IRST in modern air combat Why the Su-57 is built as a multi-role predator, not a single-mission platform What critics get wrong when they judge the Su-57 by Western metrics alone This is not a video about whether the Su-57 is “better” than American fighters. It’s about why it exists, what kind of air war it’s meant to fight, and why different doctrines produce very different machines. Modern aerial combat isn’t just about who sees first. It’s about what happens after detection — when space collapses, options disappear, and agility becomes survival. Like a panther in the jungle, the Su-57 isn’t designed to dominate one environment. It’s designed to adapt across many.