In an extremely rare strike, Ukraine’s $500 FPV drone takes down Russia’s $10 million Mi‑8 helicopter (video)

A single first‑person‑view drone from the 59th Brigade hit the low‑flying gunship on 29 September.
extremely rare strike ukraine’s $500 fpv drone takes down russia’s $10 million mi‑8 helicopter (video) ukrainian shooting russia's mi-8 29 2025 madyar khyzhaky vysot fpv-shoots-down-russian-mi-8-gunship-helicopter single first‑person‑view 59th brigade hit
Ukrainian FPV drone shooting down Russia’s Mi-8 helicopter. 29 September 2025. Source: Madyar, Khyzhaky Vysot.
In an extremely rare strike, Ukraine’s $500 FPV drone takes down Russia’s $10 million Mi‑8 helicopter (video)

Ukraine’s Unmanned Systems Forces shared dramatic footage on 29 September showing a $500 FPV drone striking and destroying a Russian Mi-8 helicopter worth $10 million. The reports did not specify the location or frontline sector where the operation took place.

Amid the ongoing drone-dominated Russo-Ukrainian war, FPV drone downings of helicopters remain extremely rare. The last reported cases were in August 2024 when FPV drones of the Ukrainian SBU security service downed two Russian helicopters in Russia’s Kursk Oblast.

Ukrainian FPV drone destroys Russian Mi-8 helicopter

According to commander of Ukraine’s Unmanned Systems Forces Robert “Madyar” Brovdi, the strike took place in the morning of 29 September. Initially, he posted a video claiming an FPV drone from the 1st Battalion of the Khyzhaky Vysot (“High-Altitude Predators”) of the 59th Separate Assault Brigade had destroyed a Mi-28 helicopter. Later, he corrected the identification to Mi-8.

The aerial footage from another drone suggests that several drones were in the air during the attack. Also, a Russian Ka-52 helicopter can be seen flying past the Mi-8.

Brovdi also shared a second extended video showing the drone’s first-person view of the strike, the crash, and the burning wreckage on the ground. In that footage, a Russian soldier can be seen in the helicopter’s open door moments before impact.

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Militarnyi notes that FPV pilots operating in first-person mode at very low altitude can maneuver precisely to hit vulnerable parts of a helicopter, and that such incidents are extremely uncommon.

Russian military Telegram channels also confirmed the loss, claiming that the Russian pilots were allegedly evacuated after the crash. It is unclear if the crew and other soldiers in the Mi-8 could have survived the crash.

Ukrainian unit highlights the cost disparity

The High-Altitude Predators unit called the Mi-8 a new “fat target” in their collection. They wrote that their Baltika crew destroyed a Russian Mi-8 helicopter worth more than $10 million with a small FPV drone costing only $500. They credited the result to coordinated work between reconnaissance, command, and pilots, as well as support from those backing the unit.

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