After our success at the Animal-AI Olympics, we faced a critical question:
Can our agents survive outside the lab — in real-world, high-stakes environments?
To find out, we began a new chapter:
Building an AI Aviator for Indian military UAVs.
We partnered with a defense startup to test whether Olbrain’s early CoF–Umwelt engine could power real-time perception, navigation, and adaptive decision-making — not just in code, but in air.
The Mission
- Bring oltau.ai out of the simulated box and embed it into drones
- Let it perceive the world, navigate dynamic terrains, and make decisions with incomplete information
- Test whether a goal-aligned agent could operate autonomously in real time — under constraints, ambiguity, and adversarial noise
This wasn’t just robotics.
This was a test of narrative coherence under fire — could an agent stay true to its CoF when survival itself is on the line?
What We Learned
- Simulation teaches behavior. Embodiment tests identity
- An agent’s Umwelt must evolve faster in the real world — it must prune, generalize, and compress continuously
- Hardware constraints enforce architectural clarity. There is no room for bloated models when every millisecond counts
This was our first step toward multi-embodiment Olbrain agents — capable of operating not just in digital worlds, but in physical, unpredictable environments.
And while we exited this project in 2023 due to shifting priorities, we look back on this phase as pivotal.
It gave us confidence that narrative-coherent intelligence isn’t just for theory or games.
It can fly.
— Team Olbrain
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