European defence technology has undergone a marked shift over the past three years. The proliferation of low-cost unmanned systems, exposed starkly by recent conflicts in Eastern Europe and the Middle East, has rendered many legacy air defence systems economically unviable. A single interceptor missile costing hundreds of thousands of euros deployed against a drone worth a few thousand has created a fundamental imbalance in modern warfare economics. This backdrop has catalysed a wave of European defence technology investment, with the sector attracting €2.3 billion in funding last year alone — double the equivalent figure from 2024.
Into this landscape steps EGIDE, a Ris-Orangis-based drone defence startup that has secured €8 million in seed funding to accelerate development of electrically propelled interceptor systems and a hardware-agnostic software platform designed to counter unmanned threats at scale. The round was co-led by Expeditions, Eurazeo, and Heartcore Capital, with participation from Galion.exe and Kima Ventures.
The company’s funding will be deployed across three primary objectives: accelerating the design and production of its interceptor systems, developing and refining Mystique — its distributed sensor and AI-driven detection platform — and expanding its engineering team across Europe to bolster capabilities in electric propulsion, aerodynamics, warhead design, and software architecture. EGIDE currently operates with a team of six to nine employees and is recruiting to support the expanded roadmap.
Who is backing EGIDE
The investor syndicate reflects confidence in both the founders and the market timing. Expeditions, which led the round, observed in a statement that “the rapid proliferation of low-cost drones is transforming the character of warfare, exposing critical vulnerabilities in legacy defence systems.” This articulates the core thesis: European defence establishments lack scalable, cost-effective alternatives to traditional air defence frameworks.
Eurazeo and Heartcore Capital, as co-leads, bring both financial firepower and sector connectivity. Heartcore Capital has developed particular expertise in applied technology businesses serving the defence sector, whilst Eurazeo’s presence signals institutional-level conviction in the opportunity. The participation of venture funds including Kima Ventures — known for early-stage defence technology bets — reinforces that this is not a one-off outlier but rather part of a structured investment wave in European defence infrastructure.
Addressing the drone problem
EGIDE’s technical approach centres on two complementary elements. The company develops electrically propelled interceptor systems designed to be orders of magnitude cheaper than conventional air defence missiles whilst retaining sufficient lethality and precision. The economics here matter: if an interceptor costs a fraction of a conventional missile, the cost-exchange ratio becomes defensible across wider operational deployments.
The second pillar is Mystique, a software platform that operates independently of specific hardware implementations. The system combines distributed sensors, AI-driven threat detection, and layered interception logic. By decoupling software from hardware, Mystique can theoretically be retrofitted into existing defence infrastructure or paired with EGIDE’s own interceptor hardware, expanding its addressable market.
The founding team comprises Simon Calonne, CEO and aerospace engineer specialising in guidance, navigation, and control systems, and Florian Audigier, CTO and pyrotechnical engineer with warhead design expertise. Both are former MBDA engineers — Europe’s largest missile systems manufacturer — which provides meaningful credibility in a sector where technical pedigree and established industry relationships carry substantial weight.
Calonne stated: “Low-cost drones are fundamentally transforming modern warfare. We are building a new generation of scalable and affordable defence capabilities designed to meet this challenge.” This framing — scaling and affordability as design principles rather than afterthoughts — differentiates EGIDE from legacy defence contractors and positions it alongside comparable European drone defence startups that have recently secured substantial funding.
The broader European defence technology moment
EGIDE is not alone in attracting capital to address the anti-drone technology problem. Frankenburg Technologies, based in Tallinn, recently raised €30 million for interceptor missile development. Tytan Technologies, operating from Munich, secured a similar €30 million round for air defence systems. Both companies emerged from comparable tactical observations: European NATO allies require new solutions urgently, and traditional procurement cycles are too slow.
The investment velocity in European defence technology reflects genuine urgency at the institutional level. Defence ministries across NATO are recalibrating procurement strategies, venture capital is deploying capital at scale, and technical talent is migrating from civilian tech into defence applications. This represents a structural reorientation, not cyclical enthusiasm.
Looking forward
EGIDE’s €8 million seed round provides sufficient runway to validate its interceptor platform and establish initial market traction with European defence customers. The real test lies in execution: delivering cost-effective, reliable systems that perform under operational constraints, securing customer validation, and expanding its engineering capacity to support a growth trajectory that will likely require a significantly larger Series A within 18 to 24 months.
The European drone defence startup ecosystem is consolidating quickly around teams with credible technical founders, clear technical differentiation, and investor backing that signals market timing. EGIDE fits this template. Whether it becomes a category leader or acquires strategic value for a larger defence prime will depend on how effectively it translates funding into engineered solutions that prove defensible in European procurement environments.
Summary
Company: EGIDE
HQ: Ris-Orangis, France
Founded: 2025
Founders: Simon Calonne (CEO), Florian Audigier (CTO)
Round: €8 million Seed
Lead Investors: Expeditions, Eurazeo, Heartcore Capital
Other Investors: Galion.exe, Kima Ventures
Total Funding: €8 million
Use of Funds: Interceptor development, Mystique platform, engineering team expansion