General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc

GA-ASI’s Gambit 6 Adds Air-to-Ground Capability to the UCAV Series

GA-ASI’s new Gambit 6 Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle expands the company’s modular aircraft family with added air-to-ground capability for electronic warfare, defense suppression, and precision strike missions By Olivia Hannam / 07 Nov 2025
GA-ASI Unveils Gambit 6 UCAV with Air-to-Ground Capability
Follow UST

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. (GA-ASI) has introduced the Gambit 6, the newest member of its Gambit Series of Unmanned Combat Air Vehicles (UCAVs)

Designed as a Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA), it extends the series’ established air-to-air performance to include air-to-ground mission capability. The multi-role platform is optimized for roles such as electronic warfare, Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses (SEAD), and deep precision strike, making it a versatile option for evolving defense needs.

Air forces throughout the world are looking to air-to-ground-capable CCAs to enhance operational capabilities and address emerging threats in a denied environment. Gambit 6 is being developed to meet the corresponding need for adaptability, scalability, and mission-specific performance.

GA-ASI President, David R. Alexander commented, “These are real threats, and they require real solutions. The modular architecture and signature-reducing internal weapons bay of Gambit 6 allow for easy integration of advanced autonomy, sensors, and weapons systems, ensuring the aircraft can adapt to a wide range of operational scenarios.

Airframes will be available for international procurement starting in 2027, with European missionized versions deliverable in 2029. GA-ASI is building industry partnerships throughout Europe with the aim of providing sovereign capabilities for all its platforms.

GA-ASI’s Gambit Series envisions multiple CCA variants rapidly reconfigured from a common core, enabling substantial commonality for rapid and affordable production at scale.

The Gambit Series is a modular family of unmanned aircraft designed to meet diverse mission requirements, including intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance; multi-domain combat; advanced training; and stealth reconnaissance. It’s built around a common core platform that accounts for a significant proportion of the aircraft’s hardware, including the landing gear, baseline avionics, and chassis. This shared foundation reduces costs, increases interoperability, and accelerates the development of mission-specific variants like Gambit 6.

By leveraging specialized configurations and advanced autonomy, Gambit aircraft offer tailored capabilities that enhance operational efficiency, reduce costs, and improve survivability in contested environments. One Gambit derivative is the U.S. Air Force’s YFQ-42A, developed as part of that service’s effort to field an AI-enabled uncrewed wingman. Based on the original Gambit 2 concept, the YFQ-42A is designed to complement human-crewed fighters like the F-35 and Next-Generation Air Dominance (NGAD) systems, expanding sensing, weapons capacity, and survivability in contested airspace.

The original concept for Gambit was announced three years ago and was based on four models. Gambit 1 is a nimble sensing platform optimized for long endurance; Gambit 2 adds the provision for air-to-air weapons; Gambit 3 looks much like Gambit 2 but is optimized for a complex adversary air role; Gambit 4 is a combat reconnaissance-focused model with no tail and swept wings. Then in 2024, GA-ASI announced Gambit 5 for ship-based CCA operations. 

To learn more, visit the General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc Partner Hub: Innovation Partner Hub
Posted by Olivia Hannam Olivia is a Junior Editor and Copywriter at Unmanned Systems Technology. She graduated with First-Class Honours in History from the University of Exeter, where she developed a passion for research and clear communication. Since joining UST in 2025, Olivia’s focus lies in creating well-crafted content that highlights the latest innovations and technologies shaping the unmanned sector. Connect

More from General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc

U.S. Air Force Greenlights Production for GA-ASI FQ-42A CCA

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems (GA-ASI) secures a historic USAF production contract for the modular FQ-42A Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA), fast-tracking next-generation autonomous fighter capabilities directly to the warfighter

Jun 18, 2026
GA-ASI MQ-9s Relocate to Fargo During Runway Works

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems has temporarily relocated its vital MQ-9 training and testing operations to Hector International Airport, marking a milestone integration of large uncrewed aircraft into active commercial airspace

Jun 17, 2026
GA-ASI & INTEC Partner on Gambit CCA

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems and the INTEC Group have signed a Memorandum of Understanding at ILA Berlin to provide sovereign architecture, integration, and logistics support for the Gambit CCA series

Jun 12, 2026
GA-ASI Backs Dutch Innovation with Investments in Six Tech Companies

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. expands its European footprint by investing capital and engineering resources into six Netherlands-based firms to advance next-generation aerospace & defense tech capabilities

Jun 09, 2026
GA-ASI Engineers Honored with Prestigious AIAA San Diego Awards

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems engineers and teams earned prestigious AIAA San Diego awards recognizing achievements in uncrewed aviation, aerospace management, and technical leadership during 2025

Jun 04, 2026
GA-ASI Demonstrates Manned-Unmanned Teaming in Autonomy Exercise

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems has demonstrated manned-unmanned teaming capabilities during a joint autonomy exercise involving an MQ-20 Avenger® surrogate Collaborative Combat Aircraft and an F-35 fighter jet using beyond line of sight communications

May 29, 2026
Advancing Unmanned Systems Through Strategic Collaboration UST works with major OEMs to foster collaboration and increase engagement with SMEs, to accelerate innovation and drive unmanned systems capabilities forward.