Training Technology And Innovation
Training Tech to Take Center Stage at DSEI
Antycip prepares to showcase advanced simulation, VR, and acoustic modeling tools at London’s DSEI 2025 defense expo.
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✍️By ZRIntel Editorial Team📍London, United KingdomLONDON Training and simulation technologies are set to be in the spotlight at the Defence and Security Equipment International (DSEI) 2025 exhibition, as Antycip brings a portfolio of cutting-edge solutions designed to modernize military preparation. The event, running from September 9 to 12 at the ExCeL London exhibition center, has long been a proving ground for innovations in defense and training systems. This year, Antycips demonstrations are expected to draw significant attention, reflecting a global push toward more immersive and integrated approaches to training. At the center of Antycips presentation is the MAK ONE suite, a comprehensive simulation environment that integrates multiple domains of warfare. The VR Forces component has received upgrades with enhanced physics, radar modeling, and electronic warfare simulations. These improvements allow trainees to practice in more realistic conditions, where variables such as radar detection, jamming, and countermeasures can be dynamically introduced. The system also incorporates Tactical Data Link integration, enabling realistic joint force training where air, sea, and land elements can share information in real time. This mirrors the operational demands of modern battlefields, where interoperability and cross-domain coordination are critical. Complementing the VR Forces environment, Antycip is highlighting its MyIG image generation technology. Displayed on a Barco TruePix LED wall, the system provides high-resolution visualization of mission scenarios. For operators and commanders, such fidelity in imagery is not just cosmetic it directly influences decision-making, situational awareness, and the ability to rehearse missions in settings that closely approximate real-world environments. The technology supports both training and pre-mission planning, bridging the gap between simulation and live operations. For undersea training, Antycip is featuring JD2Es AurBAT, a UK-developed, non-ITAR acoustic plug-in. AurBAT delivers physics-based sonar modeling, giving naval trainees the ability to practice sonar operations in realistic, variable underwater environments without the restrictions of classified or export-controlled technologies. This flexibility makes the system accessible to a wide range of international partners and underscores the growing emphasis on undersea warfare preparedness. Another highlight is the Joint Command and Staff Trainer (JCAST), a system developed for the UK Ministry of Defence. JCAST is tailored to command-level training and operational planning, providing staff officers and commanders with an environment to practice complex decision-making, resource allocation, and mission planning. By allowing leaders to rehearse both tactical and strategic-level operations in a controlled digital environment, JCAST enhances readiness while reducing the costs and risks associated with large-scale live exercises. Industry observers note that DSEI has increasingly become a venue not just for showcasing hardware, but also for demonstrating how advanced training systems can serve as force multipliers. Modern military operations demand integration across domains, rapid adaptation to evolving threats, and mastery of increasingly complex technologies. By investing in sophisticated simulation platforms, defense organizations hope to reduce training time, lower costs, and improve overall mission success rates. The combination of VR-enhanced scenarios, high-fidelity imagery, acoustic modeling, and staff-level planning tools illustrates a broader trend: the convergence of multiple simulation technologies into unified training ecosystems. Rather than relying on siloed tools for air, land, sea, and command-level operations, militaries are now looking to comprehensive platforms that replicate the interconnected nature of modern warfare.