Ukraine’s young tech entrepreneurs think that a combination of robots and lessons from war-gaming could turn the tide in the war against Russia. They are developing an intelligent operating system to enable a single controller to remotely operate swarms of interconnected drones and cannon-equipped land robots. The tech, they say, could help Ukraine cope with Russia’s numerical advantage.
Kyiv-based start-up Ark Robotics is conducting trials on an embryo of such a system in cooperation with one of the brigades of Ukraine’s ground forces. The company emerged about a year ago, when a group of young roboticists heard a speech by one of the Ukrainian commanders detailing challenges on the frontline.
“At that time, we were building unmanned ground vehicles [UGVs],” Andryi Udovychenko, Ark Robotics’s operations lead, told IEEE Spectrum on the sidelines of the Brave 1 Defense Tech Innovations Forum held in Kyiv last month. “But we heard that what we had [to offer] wasn’t enough. They said they needed something more.”
Since the war began, a vibrant defense tech innovation ecosystem has emerged in Ukraine, having started from modest beginnings of modifying China-made DJI MAVIC drones to make up for the lack of artillery. Today, Ukraine is a drone-making powerhouse. Dozens of startup companies are churning out newer and better tech and rapidly refining it to improve the effectiveness of the beleaguered nation’s troops. First-person-view drones have become a symbol of this war, but since last year they have begun to be complemented by UGVs, which help on the ground with logistics, evacuation of the wounded and also act as a new means of attack.
The new approach allows the Ukrainians to keep their soldiers away from the battle ground for longer periods but doesn’t erase the fact that Ukraine has far fewer soldiers than Russia does.
“Every single drone needs one operator, complicated drones need two or three operators, and we don’t have that many people,” Serhii Kupriienko, the CEO and founder of Swarmer, said during a panel at the Kyiv event. Swarmer is a Kyiv-based start-up developing technologies to allow groups of drones to operate as one self-coordinated swarm.
Ark Robotics are trying to take that idea yet another step. The company’s Frontier OS aspires to become a unifying interface that would allow drones and UGVs made by various makers to work together under the control of operators seated in control rooms miles away from the action.
One Controller for Many Drones and Robots
“We have many types of drones that are using different controls, different interfaces and it’s really hard to build cohesion,” Udovychenko says. “To move forward, we need a system where we can control multiple different types of vehicles in a cohesive manner in complex operations.”
Udovychenko, a gaming enthusiast, is excited about the progress Ark Robotics has made. It could be a game-changer, he says, a new foundational technology for defense. It would make Ukraine “like Protoss,” the fictional technologically advanced nation in the military science fiction strategy game StarCraft.
But what powers him is much more than youthful geekiness. Building up Ukraine’s technological dominance is a mission fueled by grief and outrage.
“I don’t want to lose any more friends,” he remarks at one point, becoming visibly emotional. “We don’t want to be dying in the trenches, but we need to be able to defend our country and given that the societal math doesn’t favor us, we need to make our own math to win.”
Soldiers at an undisclosed location used laptops to test software from Ark Robotics.Ark Robotics
The scope of the challenge isn’t lost on him. The company has so far built a vehicle computing unit that serves as a central hub and control board for various unmanned vehicles including flying drones, UGVs and even marine vehicles.
“We are building this as a solution that enables the integration of various team developers and software, allowing us to extract the best components and rapidly scale them,” Udovychenko says. “This system pairs a high-performance computing module with an interface board that provides multiple connections for vehicle systems.
The platform allows a single operator to remotely guide a flock of robots but will in the future also incorporate autonomous navigation and task execution, according to Udovychenko. So far, the team has tested the technology in simple logistics exercises. For the grand vision to work, though, the biggest challenge will be maintaining reliable communication links between the controller and the robotic fleet, but also between the robots and drones.
Tests on Ukraine Battlefields to Begin Soon
“We’re not talking about communications in a relatively safe environment when you have an LTE network that has enough bandwidth to accommodate thousands of phones,” Udovychenko notes. “At the frontline, everything is affected by electronic warfare, so you need to be able to switch between different solutions including satellite, digital radio and radio mesh so that even if you lose connection to the server, you still have connection between the drones and robots so that they can move together and maintain some level of control between them.”
Udovychenko expects Ark Robotics’s partner brigade in the Ukraine armed forces to test the early version of the tech in a real-life situation within the next couple of months. His young drone operator friends are excited, he says. And how could they not be? The technology promises to turn warfighting into a kind of real-life video game. The new class of multi-drone operators will likely be recruited from the ranks of gaming aficionados.
“If we can take the best pilots and give them tools to combine the operations, we might see a tremendous advantage,” Udovychenko says. “It’s like in StarCraft. Some people are simply able to play the game right and obliterate their opponents within minutes even if they’re starting from the same basic conditions.”
Speaking at the Brave 1 Defense Tech Innovations Forum, Colonel Andrii Lebedenko, Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, acknowledged that land battles have so far been Ukraine’s weakest area. He said that replacing “humans with robots as much as possible” is Ukraine’s near-term goal and he expressed confidence that upcoming technologies will give greater autonomy to the robot swarms.
Some roboticists, however, are more skeptical that swarms of autonomous robots will crawl en-masse across the battlefields of Eastern Ukraine any time soon. “Swarming is certainly a goal we should reach but it’s much easier with FPV drones than with ground-based robots,” Ivan Movchan, CEO of the Ukrainian Scale Company, a Kharkiv-based robot maker, told Spectrum.
“Navigation on the ground is more challenging simply because of the obstacles,” he adds. “But I do expect UGVs to become very common in Ukraine over the next year.”

The post “Kyiv Start-Up Tests Unified Controller for Robots and Drones” by Tereza Pultarova was published on 03/13/2025 by spectrum.ieee.org