Autonomous Tactical Vehicles Deployed for Live Mission Trials

Overland AI deployed its ULTRA autonomous vehicles across 15 live missions, where U.S. Army engineers executed end-to-end operations using OverWatch planning software By William Mackenzie / 19 Jun 2025

Unmanned Ground Vehicles (UGV)

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Autonomous Tactical Vehicles Deployed for Live Mission Trials
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Overland AI’s ULTRA autonomous tactical vehicles were deployed across 15 live mission scenarios to comprehensively demonstrate end-to-end, Soldier-operated ground autonomy.

Soldiers from the 555th, 36th, and 20th Engineer Brigades, as well as the 173rd Airborne Brigade, executed these 15 missions using two ULTRAs. They also leveraged Overland’s tactical C2 interface, OverWatch, to plan, execute, and adapt operations on the fly.

From pre-operation vehicle checks, payload swaps, and munition loading to mission planning and execution in OverWatch, the experimentation event was conducted almost entirely by end users.

Participating units were tasked with planning complex, multi-vehicle missions. Soldiers used ULTRA’s modular platform for kinetic and electronic warfare breaching, terrain shaping with XM204s, deception, obscuration, and the delivery of third-party payloads—including uncrewed aerial vehicles (UAVs) and electronic warfare (EW) capabilities.

Overland’s autonomy stack is highly adaptable in the field. Some operators re-tasked vehicles mid-mission in response to enemy activity and adjusted payload configurations under time pressure with little notice.

Others, planning two simultaneous terrain-shaping missions with over 20 checkpoints and five tasks per vehicle, took less than three minutes to plan.

Overland AI previously secured an $18.6 million contract with the U.S. Army and the Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) to develop autonomy software for the Army’s Robotic Combat Vehicle (RCV) program. The company continues to support a range of U.S. military programs, including those of the U.S. Army, Marine Corps, and Special Operations Command.

Chris Merz, director of product at Overland AI, stated, “This was a particularly unique event. Nearly every phase of the operation—from munition loading to software-based replanning—was in the hands of the Soldier. We saw real independence from the operator, not just in planning and execution, but in adapting tactics in real time.”

Byron Boots, co-founder and chief executive officer of Overland AI, commented, “Our mission is to empower the Armed Forces to dominate any and all missions they need to accomplish. This wide-ranging event showed that Soldiers both trust our autonomous land systems and can leverage our versatile capability from start to finish.”

Posted by William Mackenzie Will is a Content Specialist at Defense Advancement. Since 2024, he has reported on innovation in defense platforms, mission systems, and situational awareness technologies. With a background in professional copywriting and editorial content, Will provides well-informed coverage of developments in electronic warfare, rugged systems, and advanced capabilities that are shaping the future of defense operations. Connect
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