To aim at design requirements of high lift-to-drag ratio as well as high volumetric efficiency of next generation hypersonic airplanes, a body-wing-blending configuration with double flanking air inlets layout is presented. Moreover, a novel forebody design methodology which by rotating and assembling two waverider-based surfaces is firstly introduced in this paper. Some typical configurations are designed and their aerodynamic performances are evaluated by computational fluid dynamics. The results for forebodies analysis show that large volumetric efficiency, high lift-to-drag ratio, and uniformly distributed flowfield at the inlet cross section can be assured simultaneously. Furthermore, results of numerical simulation of four integrated configurations with various leading edge shapes, including three power-law curves and a cosine curve clearly show the advantage of high lift-to-drag ratio. Besides, the high pressure generated by the side wall of the airframe can be partly captured by the reasonably designed wings in the condition of small flight attack angle. Then the order of lift-to-drag ratio of four configurations at 0 degree flight attack angle is completely different from the condition of 4-degree flight attack angle. This result demonstrates that the curve shape of the leading edge is very important for the lift-to-drag ratio of the aircraft, and it should be further optimized under the cruising attack angle in future work. Air-breathing hypersonic vehicles has been much concerned by United States and other developed countries since the mid-20th century, and a series of research projects has been proposed since 1980s [1][2][3]. The completely integrated design of the airframe and propulsion system is generally adopted for the air-breathing hypersonic vehicles, however, as both the aerodynamic performance for the airframe and the engine intake/exhaust requirements shall be taken into account simultaneously, the design difficulty increased dramatically [1,[4][5][6]. As far as we know, the current aerodynamic design for hypersonic vehicles is mainly for the demonstration vehicles which focused on minimizing resistance and the optimal matching between airframe and engine, and the forebody and engine inlet integrated design is the key issues for the configuration design [7,8].The current air-breathing hypersonic vehicles can be mainly divided into two categories according to the different inlet layouts, i.e. with nose inlet and with ventral inlet. The hypersonic vehicle with nose inlet layout, such as the U.S. HyFly hypersonic demonstration vehicle [9], can efficiently achieve uniformly distributed airflow with high total pressure recovery coefficient for the engine by decreasing the interference of airframe to the maximum extent.. Moreover, the popular internal waverider inlet [7,[10][11][12][13] is also suited to the nose inlet layout [14]. The ventral inlet layout is the most commonly used layout for hypersonic vehicles,