'From the inventors of origami': Japan joins Australia in building cardboard drones designed for one-way missions and swarming targets — and at just $2,000, they’re scarily cheap

$2000 AirKamuy 150 cardboard drone
(Image credit: AirKamuy)

  • Cardboard drones reduce production costs compared to traditional military platforms
  • Flat-packed design enables rapid transport and large-scale deployment
  • Assembly requires minimal training and only a few minutes per unit

Japan has begun deploying expendable cardboard drones developed by a domestic manufacturer, AirKamuy, marking a major shift toward low-cost autonomous warfare.

The drone, known as the AirKamuy 150, is a lightweight fixed-wing platform built primarily from corrugated cardboard with a water-resistant coating.

Each unit costs roughly $2,000 to $2,500, which is dramatically cheaper than conventional military drones.

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What makes cardboard drones effective for swarm warfare

The AirKamuy 150 can travel roughly 50 miles or stay airborne for about 80 minutes using an electric propulsion system.

It can carry payloads weighing up to three pounds, including reconnaissance equipment or small munitions for one-way attack missions.

The drones are shipped flat-packed, allowing roughly 500 units to fit inside a single standard shipping container.

Each drone can be assembled in five to ten minutes by personnel with minimal training.

The cardboard construction also provides a secondary tactical advantage: lower radar reflectivity than many conventional aerospace materials.

"There is strong demand for low cost drones that can operate in large numbers and over long distances," said AirKamuy CEO Yamaguchi Takumi.

The company says the drones can be manufactured at any cardboard plant, ensuring high mass production capability and a robust supply chain.

Australia has already been supplying similar cardboard drones to Ukrainian forces, with around 100 units delivered each month.

Those Australian drones, produced by SYPAQ, have been used for ammunition delivery, reconnaissance flights, and even dropping explosive devices.

Cheap expendable drones are changing the battlefield

Rather than protecting a small number of extremely expensive platforms, militaries are increasingly experimenting with budget drones that can be sacrificed during missions.

Swarms of these drones could overwhelm air defense systems, force enemy radar activation, or absorb defensive fire ahead of more valuable assets.

In Ukraine, both Russian and Ukrainian forces have already used large numbers of low-cost drones for reconnaissance and direct attacks.

The AirKamuy 150 may represent more than an unusual cardboard aircraft; it may offer a glimpse into a future defined by vast numbers of cheap, rapidly replaceable autonomous systems.

However, in military warfare, it remains a beginner drone whose effectiveness against a $2 billion air defense system is not proven.

The logistics of launching 500 drones from a single shipping container are appealing, but recovering battle data from drones that do not return is a genuine intelligence challenge.

For a product introduced under the banner of origami, the AirKamuy 150 looks surprisingly conventional.

A folding paper crane this is not, but the tried and tested fixed-wing design is hard to beat for endurance and payload efficiency.

The tactical value of this cheap drone in contested airspace will ultimately be measured not in dollars per unit, but in how many reach their targets before being shot down.

Via Toms Hardware


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Efosa Udinmwen
Freelance Journalist

Efosa has been writing about technology for over 7 years, initially driven by curiosity but now fueled by a strong passion for the field. He holds both a Master's and a PhD in sciences, which provided him with a solid foundation in analytical thinking.

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