- Thread Author
- #1
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2023
- Messages
- 36,940
- Reaction score
- 3,023
- Trophy Points
- 180
- Location
- Philippines
- D Bucks
- 💵8.379050
- Referral Credit
- 100
According to the report, AMESA has scored a $1.25-million contract from the US Air Force’s innovation arm, AFWERX, to expand its Agent Cloud AI Wargaming system at Air University in Alabama, the service’s main hub for professional military education.
The report stated that the project aims to build multi-agent AI teammates that can jump into military exercises, react in real time, and help students navigate fast-moving, high-stakes scenarios, making digital Wargaming feel more like the real thing. Players can use their digital teammates to test strategies, stress-test decisions, and explore risks before they reach live training.
The report also said that Kence Anderson, founder and CEO of AMESA, said that they built the AMESA Agent Cloud as a training ground for intelligent systems, giving AI agents a place to practice, fail safely, and grow stronger through feedback. He said that applying this framework to Air Force Wargaming brings us closer to a future where human and machine decision-making evolve together.
Additionally, AI tools, like AMESA’s multi-agent orchestration and practice platform, are being developed to provide the ability to incorporate AI agents as adaptive teammates in Wargaming, said Lisle Babcock, director of the Air Force Wargaming Institute. The contract award follows a US Air Force request for technology last August to modernize Wargaming, shifting away from slow tabletop drills to cloud-based simulations that respond in real time.
SOURCE: MILITARY AI
The report stated that the project aims to build multi-agent AI teammates that can jump into military exercises, react in real time, and help students navigate fast-moving, high-stakes scenarios, making digital Wargaming feel more like the real thing. Players can use their digital teammates to test strategies, stress-test decisions, and explore risks before they reach live training.
The report also said that Kence Anderson, founder and CEO of AMESA, said that they built the AMESA Agent Cloud as a training ground for intelligent systems, giving AI agents a place to practice, fail safely, and grow stronger through feedback. He said that applying this framework to Air Force Wargaming brings us closer to a future where human and machine decision-making evolve together.
Additionally, AI tools, like AMESA’s multi-agent orchestration and practice platform, are being developed to provide the ability to incorporate AI agents as adaptive teammates in Wargaming, said Lisle Babcock, director of the Air Force Wargaming Institute. The contract award follows a US Air Force request for technology last August to modernize Wargaming, shifting away from slow tabletop drills to cloud-based simulations that respond in real time.
SOURCE: MILITARY AI
