Taiwan has successfully completed trials of a new indigenous suicide drone named Overkill, a first-person view loitering munition designed to enhance the island’s defenses amid mounting threats from China. Modeled on battlefield innovations seen in Ukraine’s war against Russia, the Overkill drone has passed combat certification and is set to enter production.

The drone was developed jointly by Thunder Tiger, a Taiwanese robotics firm, and the National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology (NCSIST), with advanced artificial intelligence and optics systems provided by Auterion, a Swiss-American drone software company. The same technology suite has helped Ukrainian forces target and destroy Russian tanks, armored vehicles, and other high-value assets.

“The lessons learned from the war in Ukraine are definitely applicable to a potential conflict with China,” said Auterion CEO Lorenz Meier. “The drone will easily destroy a Chinese warship if it lacks air defense.”

The Overkill drone is designed for precision strikes and is piloted in real time by an operator using FPV controls. Its integration of Auterion’s AI-driven software and high-performance camera systems marks a technological leap for Taiwan’s growing drone arsenal.

Thunder Tiger has secured licenses to install Auterion’s software on 25,000 drones, with plans to scale production and earmark some for export. Taiwan is also preparing a dedicated drone procurement budget, which officials plan to submit to the legislature later this year.

The launch of Overkill highlights Taiwan’s urgent drive to reduce its reliance on Chinese-manufactured drone components. Taiwan is seeking closer ties with American and European defense firms and positioning itself as a supplier of non-Chinese drone technology to Southeast Asia, where countries like the Philippines, Vietnam, India and Indonesia are increasingly wary of Chinese surveillance and hardware.

Taiwan’s drone development program began in earnest three years ago. While early production goals fell short, recent breakthroughs like Overkill point to meaningful progress and growing industrial capacity. Taiwan has already experimented with naval drones, drawing on Ukrainian tactics. On June 3, Ukraine’s Security Service conducted a high-profile maritime drone attack on the Kerch Bridge, a move that reportedly influenced some of Taiwan’s recent naval drone trials.

Overkill’s successful debut signals Taiwan’s determination to rapidly adapt modern drone warfare to its own defense posture. With cross-strait tensions continuing to rise and the PLA Navy’s presence expanding, Taiwan’s military is betting on drones to provide an asymmetric edge.

CONTEÚDO RELACIONADO: Taiwan to employ sea drones to deter Chinese invasion

Post Image Credit: 軍聞社 via YouTube

Follow C-UAS Hub on LinkedIn for regular counter-UAS content updates.