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A team of scientists from TU Delft in the Netherlands is celebrating a highly significant autonomous drone milestone. According to a university press release, “for the first time, a drone has beaten human pilots in an international drone racing competition.” This milestone for AI-controlled drones was passed at the recent A2RL Drone Championship 2025 in Abu Dhabi. Situated in a large indoor space in the UAE capital, there were two prestigious drone racing events. The Falcon Cup Finals saw the best human pilots pit their skills against each other. Meanwhile, the A2RL Drone Championship was a showcase for the fastest AI-powered, autonomous drones. Perhaps most interestingly, a subsequent race dubbed the A2RL Grand Challenge allowed the best human pilots to face off against the best AI contenders. As per our headline, the TU Delft AI drone was the ultimate winner. Central to the Dutch scientists’ drone racing win was a finely tuned AI “capable of split-second, high-performance control.” The A2RL took place on the very winding track, with drones reaching flight speeds up to 95.8 km/h, so there’s not a lot of room for suboptimal racing technique, let alone mistakes. Readers must also understand that the autonomous racers were confined by several factors. Firstly, the drone only had access to a single on-device forward-facing camera and a single motion sensor, making the competition much fairer vs humans. The AI drone teams were also strictly time, computationally, and energy limited, notes the source.
Full report : Researchers use new deep neural network to send control commands directly to AI drone.