Zen Technologies has revealed its new HyperStrike long-range strike system during the North Tech Symposium 2026 in Prayagraj, signaling the company’s ambitions to expand into the strategic precision-strike segment of the defence market.
According to the company, HyperStrike is designed to engage targets beyond 400 kilometres, placing it among a growing class of long-range systems intended to deliver precision effects deep inside contested areas. However, key details regarding the platform’s configuration, propulsion technology, warhead options, guidance systems, and deployment methods have yet to be made public.
The unveiling occurred alongside several other indigenous defence solutions developed by Zen Technologies, including AI-powered counter-drone systems, smart airburst ammunition, the Vrishab unmanned ground vehicle, and the Zen Bijli directed-energy weapon, highlighting the company’s focus on advanced and autonomous battlefield technologies.
If HyperStrike matures into a precision-guided missile or loitering strike platform, it could provide the capability to engage strategic targets such as military headquarters, logistics nodes, air-defence installations, and critical infrastructure from extended stand-off ranges. Such a capability would position Zen Technologies within a sector largely dominated by state-backed missile development programmes.
For now, HyperStrike remains one of the most intriguing yet least-detailed systems showcased by the company. Additional technical information will be necessary to determine whether it is intended as a missile, loitering munition, unmanned strike aircraft, or another category of long-range precision weapon.
















































