The Gambit 6 UCAV will add air-to-ground capabilities to international Collaborative Combat Aircraft programs.
General Atomics Aeronautical Systems (GA-ASI) has unveiled the latest iteration of the Gambit Series of Unmanned Combat Air Vehicles (UCAV), named Gambit 6, at the ongoing International Fighter Conference in Rome, Italy. The new UCAV joins five other variants based upon the common core of the Gambit Series.
Gambit 6
Gambit 6 will be a multirole Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA), adding air-to-ground operations to its already available air-to-air capability. GA-ASI says the platform is optimized for roles such as Electronic Warfare (EW), Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses (SEAD), and deep precision strike.
The goal is to offer Gambit 6 for international CCA programs. In fact, the company says that “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.”
“These are real threats, and they require real solutions,” said GA-ASI President David R. Alexander. “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.”

Gambit 6 appears externally similar to the YFQ-42A CCA being tested for the U.S. Air Force, itself based off the original Gambit 2 concept. The rendering released by GA-ASI shows Gambit 6 releasing what appear to be GBU-53/B StormBreaker precision-guided glide bombs.
The company says the new platform will be available for international procurement starting in 2027, with European missionized versions deliverable in 2029. In fact, GA-ASI is building industry partnerships throughout Europe, paving the way for a possible pitch of the new systems to European operators.
Gambit
Gambit is a family of high-performance autonomous combat aircraft, designed to meet diverse mission requirements, including intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance; multi-domain combat; advanced training; and stealth reconnaissance. The aircraft are based on a common ‘chassis’, known as the ‘Gambit Core’, which accounts for a significant proportion of the aircraft’s hardware, including the landing gear, baseline avionics, and chassis.
The Gambit variants differ by their airframe, wing, engine, sensors and/or weapons, each addressing different mission sets. GA-ASI says this shared foundation reduces costs, increases interoperability, and accelerates the development of mission-specific variants.

This is the same approach of the ‘genus/species’ concept which GA-ASI developed with the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) as part of the Low-Cost Attritable Aircraft Platform Sharing (LCAAPS) program. The XQ-67A Off-Board Sensing Station (OBSS), also made by GA-ASI, is also based on the same concept.
Before Gambit 6, the company already mentioned five different variants: Gambit 1, focused on Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR); Gambit 2, which integrates air-to-air weapons’ employment; Gambit 3, a high-fidelity target drone; Gambit 4, a stealthy, long endurance ISR drone; and Gambit 5, a CATOBAR (Catapult Assisted Take Off Barrier Arrested Recovery) carrier-capable UCAV.
GA-ASI and CCAs
GA-ASI is creating a considerable portfolio of Collaborative Combat Aircraft platforms. In fact, the company is already working on the U.S. Air Force’s CCA program with two YFQ-42s now flying, has been selected to develop the conceptual design for a carrier-based CCA for the U.S. Navy, and is now working on CCAs for international operators.
The company revealed on Nov. 3 that it has flown a second YFQ-42A, expanding the testing campaign for the Air Force’s new uncrewed fighters. The YFQ-42A is designed for semi-autonomous air-to-air operations and draws on the “genus-species” approach pioneered with the XQ-67A Off-Board Sensing Station (OBSS).

GA-ASI says it leveraged advanced model-based digital engineering to accelerate the aircraft’s development while optimizing capabilities for future air dominance. Central to the program is the autonomy core that will make the YFQ-42 able to operate together with manned aircraft.
The lessons learned on this platform will surely flow into the Navy’s CCA program, seemingly based off the carrier-capable Gambit 5, and now the new Gambit 6, based on the Gambit 2 just like the YFQ-42A. This would further increase the interoperability between the two U.S. services and Allied operators.
The interest by European operators is real, and recently the Royal Netherlands Air Force (RNLAF) has become the first European air force to formally join the U.S. Air Force’s CCA program. It has been reported that the agreement grants the Netherlands “total access” to the U.S. Air Force’s CCA program “on all levels.”

