RED 6 has raised $109.0M in total across 4 funding rounds.
RED 6's investors include Alumni Ventures, Tribe Capital, Uprising, Matt Mazzeo, Snowpoint Ventures, Moonshots Capital, TMV.
Red 6 is an augmented reality (AR) technology company founded in 2018, specializing in synthetic air combat training for military pilots through its flagship product, the Airborne Tactical Augmented Reality System (ATARS).[2][3][4][5][6] ATARS enables pilots to simulate realistic, scalable threats in dynamic outdoor environments using wide field-of-view, full-color AR hardware and software integrated into cockpits, serving primarily the U.S. Air Force and allies to address pilot training shortages.[3][5][6][7] The company solves the military's readiness crisis by allowing safe, frequent, AI-enabled training with humans and machines in real-world settings, reducing reliance on live aircraft sorties amid resource constraints.[5][6][7] With headquarters in Orlando, Florida (after relocating from California), Red 6 has raised over $107 million in funding, secured a $70 million U.S. Air Force contract, and employs around 155 people across multiple offices, demonstrating strong growth momentum.[2][4][5]
Red 6 was founded in 2018 by Daniel Robinson (CEO), Glenn Snyder, and Nick Bicanic, leveraging their expertise to tackle outdated military pilot training methods.[5][6] The idea emerged from recognizing the U.S. Air Force's pilot shortfall, insufficient aircraft availability, and resource limitations, prompting the development of ATARS as the world's first outdoor, dynamic-environment AR system for in-air simulations.[5][6][7] Early traction included a $30 million Series A funding round and a pivotal 2021 contract worth up to $70 million over five years with the U.S. Air Force, followed by a headquarters move to Miami and a new Orlando technology hub to tap into Florida's simulation industry, initially hiring 100 employees.[3][4][5]
Red 6 stands out in military AR training through these key strengths:
Red 6 rides the wave of augmented reality's military adoption, accelerated by tools like Microsoft's HoloLens, to modernize air combat training amid global readiness crises.[3][7] Timing is critical as peer adversaries advance, straining U.S. and allied resources—ATARS counters this by enabling cost-effective, high-fidelity simulations without live munitions or rare aircraft, aligning with trends in AI-human teaming and LVC training.[4][6][7] Market forces like defense budget shifts toward tech-enabled training and Florida's simulation ecosystem favor Red 6's expansion, positioning it to influence broader ecosystems by partnering with innovators like AERALIS and potentially extending AR to civilian applications.[4][5]
Red 6 is poised to dominate synthetic training with ATARS expansions, including deeper AI integration and sixth-gen aircraft compatibility via partnerships.[4][6] Trends like escalating great-power competition and AR hardware maturation will amplify demand, potentially evolving Red 6's influence from military niche to global training standard-setter.[6][7] As it scales from its 2018 roots, expect further funding, hires, and tech hubs to cement its role in redefining how pilots "think like the enemy" in immersive worlds.[1][5][6]
RED 6 has raised $109.0M across 4 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $70.0M Series B in June 2023.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 1, 2023 | $70.0M Series B | Alumni Ventures, Tribe Capital, Uprising, Matt Mazzeo | |
| May 1, 2021 | $30.0M Series A | Snowpoint Ventures | |
| Feb 1, 2021 | $7.0M Venture Round | Moonshots Capital, Snowpoint Ventures, TMV | |
| Apr 1, 2019 | $2.0M Seed | Moonshots Capital, TMV |