Switch
Captain
It's fair to say that all of the 4th gen fighter aircraft have evolved significantly from their inception to the present day, but with the International Super Hornet Roadmap - or as I like to call it, Hyper Hornet - Boeing aims to set new benchmarks in terms of just how far one can evolve a platform dating back to the 70s.
Boeing is clearly pitching Hyper Hornet primarily as a low-risk alternative to the F-35 to take advantage of that program's various development woes and cost overruns. Whether a Super Hornet integrating all of these options would actually be a whole lot cheaper than an F-35 is anyone's guess. No doubt Boeing would say 'yes'.
In any case, I'd love to see something like this flying, but the sticking point - unsurprisingly - seems to be money. With the exception of the engine upgrade (offering ~20% greater thrust over the base F414) which is already part of Boeing's pitch to India for its MMRCA program, none of this stuff is funded. The US Navy - already scraping the barrel to afford F-35 - isn't planning to do so, and most other current and potential operators are too small to afford to do it themselves. Of course, if the F-35C really falls in a hole that could all change, but if we assume that it doesn't then the best chances for seeing Hyper Hornet realised would seem to lie with Brazil, Japan and India.

Boeing is clearly pitching Hyper Hornet primarily as a low-risk alternative to the F-35 to take advantage of that program's various development woes and cost overruns. Whether a Super Hornet integrating all of these options would actually be a whole lot cheaper than an F-35 is anyone's guess. No doubt Boeing would say 'yes'.
In any case, I'd love to see something like this flying, but the sticking point - unsurprisingly - seems to be money. With the exception of the engine upgrade (offering ~20% greater thrust over the base F414) which is already part of Boeing's pitch to India for its MMRCA program, none of this stuff is funded. The US Navy - already scraping the barrel to afford F-35 - isn't planning to do so, and most other current and potential operators are too small to afford to do it themselves. Of course, if the F-35C really falls in a hole that could all change, but if we assume that it doesn't then the best chances for seeing Hyper Hornet realised would seem to lie with Brazil, Japan and India.