Anduril’s EagleEye bundles AI mission command, fused battlefield perception, and ultralight survivability into a helmet-native system that connects dismounted soldiers to sensors and unmanned assets through the Lattice network. (Source: Image by RR)

EagleEye Combines Mission Command Software With Helmet-Native Heads-Up Displays

Anduril announced EagleEye, a modular, AI-driven family of systems that integrates mission planning, enhanced perception and survivability into a single, lightweight soldier-worn architecture. Built to pair with Anduril’s existing Soldier Borne Mission Command programs and the Lattice sensor network, EagleEye combines a collaborative 3D “sand table” for mission rehearsal, real-time fused video feeds, and helmet-native HUDs (daylight and night-vision) that overlay tactical information directly into a warfighter’s field of view. The company frames the system as more than a tool—“a new teammate” that reduces cognitive load while keeping dismounted operators connected to unmanned assets and command functions.

On the perception and command side, EagleEye fuses distributed sensor inputs to deliver advanced blue-force tracking, rear and flank situational awareness, spatial audio, and RF detection. Operators can task UAS, control robotic teammates, call for fires, and pin live video to terrain in a shared operational picture that persists through denied, degraded, intermittent, and limited (DDIL) environments thanks to Lattice mesh networking. The platform, according to an article at anduril.com, emphasizes persistence of command-and-control even when line of sight or traditional comms are compromised.

EagleEye also targets survivability and ergonomics: the system offers an ultralight shell with beyond-full-cut ballistic protection and blast-wave mitigation while keeping sensors aligned with a soldier’s center of gravity. Configurable hardware variants—helmet, visor, and glasses—reduce bulk compared with traditional night-vision rigs. Anduril says the modular, software-first architecture facilitates continuous upgrades and keeps weight, balance, and long-wear comfort front of mind for operational use.

Development leverages commercial partnerships with Meta, OSI, Qualcomm, and Gentex to accelerate AR, compute, sensing, and helmet integration, a strategy Anduril says lowers cost and risk. EagleEye is positioned as a standard-setting node within the Lattice ecosystem: a battlefield-grade, field-upgradable system that consolidates situational awareness, mission planning, and unmanned-asset control to “plan, fight, and survive” while keeping soldiers connected across contested spaces.

read more at anduril.com