Chinese military reveals drone wolf pack capable of swarm operations — robot dogs can be equipped with grenade launchers and machine guns for urban combat

a robot security dog
(Image credit: Getty Images)

The Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) just revealed its intelligent canine robots that can work together in a swarm for urban combat. These “wolf packs” were shown off on a TV documentary named Unmanned Competition for the state channel CCTV, according to the South China Morning Post. What made these new drone models different was that they could coordinate directly with each other, allowing a group of robot dogs to be controlled by a single soldier without micromanagement.

There are various ways of controlling the entire drone task force, including through voice commands, via a tactical glove, or by a control stick that can be directly mounted on rifles. While these machines can operate independently and are capable of autonomous identification and targeting, it’s said that they still require human confirmation to conduct a strike.

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Combined drone arms

The robot wolves aren’t limited to land operations. While they cannot take flight, they can coordinate their actions with other drones to combine air-ground operations. One such example is the Atlas uncrewed aerial vehicle, which works together as a single swarm with up to 96 individual drones with specific tasks, including reconnaissance, jamming, and strikes. This is aside from the 200-strong AI drone swarm that the PLA revealed earlier this year, which was also controlled by a single operator.

Modern battlefields have shown that airborne drones pose a major threat in combat operations, so the Chinese military also showed off two anti-drone laser weapons. The Guangjian 11-E uses a more energy-efficient low-power laser designed to take down smaller drones, like the ones that are typically sold commercially, while the more powerful 21-A version is built for “hard destruction,” likely meaning it’s powerful enough to destroy an airborne target.

Finally, police in Zhuhai, Guangdong, located outside of Macau and across the bay to the west of Hong Kong, showcased their L30 uncrewed surface vessels. These autonomous boats can hit 35 knots (around 65 kph or 40 mph) and have a range of 300 nautical miles (about 556 km or 345 miles). Just like the other drones, the L30 fleet can work together and use AI for targeting and response. It can also perform blockades and ram other vessels to disable them, as necessary.

One more technology that Chinese researchers are working on for these drones is “satellite-denied navigation,” which would allow these weapons to operate and coordinate, even in areas where there is jamming and active signal denial. Their goal is to achieve “large-scale full autonomy,” allowing the Chinese military to deploy combined arms drone task forces to achieve military objectives without needing human intervention.

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Jowi Morales
Contributing Writer

Jowi Morales is a tech enthusiast with years of experience working in the industry. He’s been writing with several tech publications since 2021, where he’s been interested in tech hardware and consumer electronics.

  • Hooda Thunkett
    Each drone reportedly has a top speed of 9 mph (about 154 kmph)...
    Pretty sure this doesn't math.
    Reply
  • Dr3ams
    Any images or video?
    Reply
  • rgd1101
    would think this would to much more expensive than a drone
    Reply
  • USAFRet
    rgd1101 said:
    would think this would to much more expensive than a drone
    Different use cases.
    Reply
  • Ktbpylon
    Chinese people's best army also says that robots can form together into a single large robot capable of fusion power and firing particle cannons across the ocean at targets the size of a pebble :ROFLMAO:
    Are there any videos of these robots doing half of the things claimed? Any footage of them in actual combat situations?
    Reply
  • Kamen Rider Blade
    Why do I get a Zoids vibe from the pic in the article?
    Reply
  • alan.campbell99
    Kamen Rider Blade said:
    Why do I get a Zoids vibe from the pic in the article?
    Damn, got in before me on this one.
    Reply
  • Plurality
    Hmm. So the "toes" on the front limbs are different sizes, and the bolts at the knees are in different locations.
    The reflection of the front left "paw" has a different shape and width than the portrayed front left paw.
    The rear right "paw" only has one "toe" while the rear left "paw" has three.
    And a mysterious fuzzy line connects the gun turret to the underbelly, almost as if its an artifact of AI generated imagery.

    See, this is why TH isn't worth subscribing to. They can't even do a cursory examination of a story.
    Reply
  • YSCCC
    It sounds like wrong focus propaganda to me... the advantage of modern drone warfare is that it is dirt cheap and at some altitude and fast (compared to infrantry or tanks), plus able to do top attack on weak links to armored vehicles. these drone wolfs are just slower and smaller infrantry with questionable ability to differentiate friends and foes, what for?
    Reply
  • rgd1101
    don't know why TH use a AI image instead of from the south china morning post
    found this on X
    2037372467963167067View: https://x.com/Sinical_C/status/2037372467963167067?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E2037372467963167067%7Ctwgr%5Ee7cc8f6a1eef8239f3a65e6239f47a178ea253ab%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.zerohedge.com%2Ftechnology%2Fchina-flexes-robot-wolves-machine-guns-and-collective-brain

    a look alike to boston dynamics
    https://bostondynamics.com/products/spot/
    Reply