Auterion Demonstrates First Multi-Manufacturer Combat Drone Swarm
Live test in Germany shows FPV and fixed-wing drones operating as one coordinated combat system
Auterion has completed what it describes as the world’s first live demonstration of a combat drone swarm made up of aircraft from multiple manufacturers. The event took place in Munich, Germany, and was conducted for government customers.
According to the company, the hybrid swarm combined first-person-view (FPV) munitions and fixed-wing drones into a single, coordinated force. The systems executed a full end-to-end kill chain, from target detection to strike, under shared autonomous control.
Auterion says the demonstration marks a major step toward autonomous mass in modern warfare and shows how mixed fleets can operate as one combat entity.
A Unified Swarm Across Different Platforms
The live exercise included eight short-range FPV munitions and two medium-range fixed-wing platforms. Human operators supervised the mission while Auterion’s swarm engine coordinated the drones.
The swarm carried out a complete find, fix, and finish sequence. This included a coordinated, vision-guided terminal approach and synchronized strike effects.
“This is the moment when swarming autonomy stops being a concept and becomes an operational reality,” said Lorenz Meier, CEO and founder of Auterion. “For the first time, FPVs and fixed-wing loitering munitions from different manufacturers flew, hit, and finished together as a unified swarm. This is the architecture that future warfare will be built on.”
Unlike traditional drone missions that rely on individual pilots, the demonstration showed drones operating under shared logic. FPV platforms handled fast, low-altitude engagements. Fixed-wing systems focused on intelligence, surveillance, and longer-range strike tasks.
Each aircraft understood the mission, the target set, and the timing of effects.
Software-Driven Control of the Kill Chain
Meier said this shift is critical as the pace of combat increases.
“The modern kill chain is simply too fast for manual coordination. Software has to do the heavy lifting, while humans make the decisions. This is how you maintain control without slowing down the fight.”
Auterion also highlighted the role of interoperability in the demonstration. The swarm included unmanned systems from three different manufacturers, all operating together without custom integrations.
“Interoperability is not a slogan anymore. It’s a battlefield requirement,” Meier said. “We need to overpower our near-peer adversaries with mass.”
The company says its operating system unified the different platforms under a single architecture. This approach is intended to reduce vendor lock-in and allow allies to scale mixed fleets more quickly.
Seamless Integration Into Battlefield Tools
The hybrid swarm operated using Auterion’s Nemyx engine, which provided autonomous, real-time coordination. Live video and mission data were integrated into ATAK and shared through standardized cursor on target feeds.
This allowed operators to maintain situational awareness and positive control throughout the mission. Auterion says this reflects a broader shift toward software-defined, network-native kill chains.
The company argues that future forces will move away from treating drones as individual tools. Instead, swarms will act as distributed formations designed to improve deterrence, survivability, and combat effectiveness.
“We’re watching the battlefield evolve from manned platforms with unmanned support, to unmanned formations with humans in command,” Meier said. “Today’s demonstration shows what comes next: mass autonomy that scales across nations and manufacturers. The future fight will be defined by swarms, not individual drones.”
About Auterion
Auterion is an international defense software company that provides AI-powered autonomy solutions for air, land, and sea platforms. Its open and modular software stack supports government and enterprise customers worldwide.
The company is headquartered in Arlington, Virginia, with a European hub in Munich, Germany. Auterion says its focus is on enabling resilient, autonomous defense capabilities across the transatlantic partnership.