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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
Palmer Luckey, co-founder of Anduril, joins Sourcery for a wide-ranging discussion on defense technology, from autonomous fighter jets to speculative concepts like moon warfare and invisibility tech. (02:12) Luckey discusses Fury (FQ-44), the first autonomous fighter jet procured by the U.S. Air Force, which went from contract signing to first flight in just 556 days—the fastest fighter development since the Korean War. The conversation covers Anduril's approach as a "defense product company" rather than a traditional contractor, recent media criticism over testing failures, and Luckey's theories about UAPs potentially originating from the past rather than the future. (25:29) The episode also explores ocean surveillance technology, the U.S. shipbuilding gap with China, and Luckey's personal projects including ModRetro gaming consoles and turbine-powered motorcycles.
Co-founder of Anduril Industries, a defense technology company valued at over $14 billion. Previously founded Oculus VR (acquired by Meta for $2 billion) and started as a journalism major before transitioning to tech entrepreneurship. Luckey has been working on defense technologies and gaming projects since his teens, including founding ModRetro at age 14-15 for vintage console modifications.
Host representing Sourcery, a venture capital firm focused on technology investments. Conducts in-depth interviews with founders and technology leaders about their companies, strategies, and industry perspectives.
Anduril operates as a "defense product company" rather than a traditional defense contractor, investing their own money to build functional prototypes before selling to the government. (03:45) This approach creates better incentive structures where the company makes more money by moving faster and getting things right the first time, rather than traditional cost-plus contracts that reward delays and overruns. Luckey emphasizes they prefer going to the government "with a product rather than a PowerPoint," which led to beating established giants like Boeing and Lockheed Martin for the Fury fighter contract.
When criticized by journalists for test failures and fires during weapons testing, Luckey defended the approach, stating they've "started hundreds of fires" during testing over eight years because this is how functional products are developed. (06:07) He emphasizes that pushing systems to their limits through controlled failure is essential for finding problems before deployment. The key insight is that successful companies test to failure early and often, rather than avoiding risk and discovering problems later when stakes are higher.
Anduril designs weapons systems to be manufactured by existing American industrial capacity like automotive and tractor factories, rather than requiring specialized defense manufacturing. (32:32) This approach mirrors World War II strategy where bombers and missiles were designed around what existing factories could build. Luckey explains they make deliberate trade-offs, like making Fury's landing gear slightly heavier to ensure it can be manufactured at any machine shop rather than just two specialized facilities nationwide.
Both in ground surveillance (Sentry Tower) and ocean monitoring (Seabed Sentry), the hard technological problem isn't detecting objects—it's classifying and filtering what matters. (23:03) Their systems can detect everything within miles but the real value comes from reasoning about what operators actually care about and stripping out irrelevant data. This principle applies broadly: in an information-rich world, the competitive advantage lies in intelligent filtering and prioritization rather than just data collection.
When faced with media criticism about testing approaches, Luckey refused to change Anduril's successful development methodology, recognizing that journalists asking "what will you do differently?" reflects an entitled assumption that companies should modify their strategies based on press criticism. (08:07) He emphasizes the importance of sticking to proven approaches rather than reacting to external pressure from parties who lack domain expertise or operational responsibility.