Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

The ‘Mantis Drone Claw’ turns any quadcopter into a high-stakes arcade crane game

Add as a preferred source on Google

If you’re a drone owner looking to get a little more fun and functionality from your flying machine, here’s a neat little tool that might be of interest.

Designed by British mechanical engineering graduate Ben Kardoosh, the exquisitely named “Mantis Drone Claw” is a more sophisticated version of the device used by those arcade grabber games. He came up with the idea after deciding drones would be more fun if they incorporated an additional interactive element beyond just flying the machine and videoing the surroundings.

Recommended Videos

The Claw, which works without an external power source, consists of five hinged metal talons and hangs on the end of a supplied Kevlar cord. The talons automatically spread open as they touch a surface, and come together again as the drone regains height. Aim it accurately and any small object beneath the talons can be grabbed and transported back to the drone operator – check out the video above to see it in action.

You might use it to salvage something you dropped in a hard-to-reach location, or perhaps as the basis of a fetch-and-return racing game with friends. Heck, you could even use it to deal with those discarded underpants that’ve been decaying on the floor for weeks.

Kardoosh recently unveiled his Mantis Drone Claw on Kickstarter and needs just £5,000 ($7,550) of funds to get it to market.

He’s planning on three designs – an ultra-light 20-gram version comprising high-strength aluminum alloy components strong enough to lift anything weighing up to a kilogram (so long as your drone can handle it).

The second design, weighing 70 grams, is a more robust unit made with steel that’s “flameproof, chemical proof, water proof and rust proof,” Kardoosh says, adding, “If for any reason you ever needed to use a drone to pick up a 2kg burning hot coal, covered in acid, in a toil of ocean spray, with this you could.”

The priciest model will be made to order and hand-crafted by Kardoosh himself. This one comes in a presentation cabinet, with the designer suggesting it’ll be “too pretty” to actually use.

A pledge of £25 ($38) will get you the basic model, £39 ($59) the sturdier design, and £133 ($200) the hand-crafted version. If the project proceeds smoothly, backers should receive their Mantis Drone Claw in April 2016.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
The Android Show 2026: Gemini Intelligence, Googlebook, Android 17 updates, and everything else
Gemini Intelligence, Googlebooks, Android 17, and redesigned Android Auto. Google didn't hold back at its pre-I/O show, and the main event is still a week away.
The Android Show 2026

Every year, Google front-loads its Android announcements in a separate pre-show the week before its annual I/O conference. This year, the company did exactly that, and The Android Show: I/O Edition was anything but a warmup act. 

Google showed up well prepared, with plenty of software and a major hardware announcement that took everyone by surprise. One by one, let's talk about everything, including a deeply integrated AI overhaul, a long-overdue security upgrade, an Android Auto makeover that feels like it was designed for 2026, and a brand-new laptop category. 

Read more
Google is redefining the cursor for computers, and it’s AI-charged future looks ridiculous
Google’s Magic Pointer could be the next evolution of AI on laptops
AI, App

The humble mouse pointer has barely changed in decades. It moves, clicks, selects, drags, and occasionally turns into a spinning wheel of frustration. Google now wants to turn that tiny arrow into one of the most powerful AI tools on your laptop, which sounds ridiculous until you think about how often you use it.

The company has announced Magic Pointer for Googlebook, its new category of Gemini-powered laptops. The feature gives the cursor AI abilities, allowing it to understand what you are pointing at and help you act on it without needing a long prompt or a separate chatbot window.

Read more
6 things Gemini Intelligence is about to do across your Android devices
Logo, Disk, Symbol

Google is bringing Gemini Intelligence to Android, which brings the best of Gemini to its most intelligent devices. The company really wants you to get your work done by Gemini throughout the day, all while staying in control and keeping your data private. Google is rolling out these features starting with the Samsung Galaxy and Google Pixel devices this summer. Furthermore, we’ll see these features on other Android devices, including watches, cars, glasses, and laptops, later this year.

Your assistant is about to get a lot more hands-on, without you having to ask twice

Read more