Two of our team members took first place at the EUDIS Hackathon 2025 with our Thunderbee drone interceptor — earning recognition from the Lithuanian Armed Forces along the way.
Two of our team members just came back with a win from the EUDIS Hackathon 2025 — and not just any win. Our solution caught the attention of the Lithuanian Armed Forces, earning us their trust and recognition alongside the top prize.
The project at the center of it all: Thunderbee, our AI-driven drone interceptor.
What Thunderbee Does
Thunderbee is built to neutralize aerial threats fast. It combines autonomous flight, AI-driven target recognition, and rapid prototyping into a system designed for real-world defense scenarios — not just lab conditions.
The core idea is simple: modern battlefields are increasingly contested by small, cheap drones. Thunderbee is our answer to that problem — a counter-UAS platform that can identify and intercept threats without requiring a human in the loop for every decision.
Why This Matters
Winning a hackathon is one thing. Earning the recognition of the Lithuanian Armed Forces in the process is something else entirely. It tells us we're building in the right direction — that Thunderbee isn't just technically impressive, it's operationally relevant.
This is exactly the kind of validation we work toward. Defense technology doesn't get a chance to prove itself in a sandbox — it has to work when it counts.
What's Next
This win is a milestone, not a finish line. Thunderbee is an active project, and we're continuing to develop and harden it. If you're working on defense challenges and want to explore what we're building, reach out — we're always open to serious conversations.
A huge congratulations to our winning team members. This one's well earned.

