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Aston Martin made a war SUV for Modern Warfare 4
Aston Martin’s Dreadnought is a digital-only armored SUV for Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4 and Warzone, with a V12 and luxury trim.

Image: TechRadar
Aston Martin has unveiled the Dreadnought, a digital-only military SUV created exclusively for Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4.
The fictional vehicle mixes the brand’s luxury cues with battlefield styling. Aston Martin says it combines rugged armor plating, all-wheel drive, advanced aerodynamics, and a V12 engine to deliver both protection and what it describes as “supercar levels of performance” alongside “elite tactical performance.” Inside, it reportedly features details such as an Oxford Tan leather dashboard and a golden gear lever, while combat-focused additions include weapons storage and reserve fuel tanks.
The name references HMS Dreadnought, the early 20th-century British warship whose impact was so large it gave rise to an entire class of battleship.
There is one obvious catch: this is not a real production vehicle. It is a concept designed only for the game. According to Aston Martin chief creative officer Marek Reichman, the project was a “not inconsiderable challenge” because it required the company to rethink what an Aston Martin could look like in a virtual setting where “the only limit is imagination.” He added that the team still imagined it as “a vehicle living in the real world,” which is why it “feels genuinely real.”

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Players will be able to drive the Aston Martin Dreadnought in Modern Warfare 4's DMZ mode when the game launches on October 20, 2026. It will also appear in the free-to-play battle royale Call of Duty: Warzone.
Fans heading to Fanatics Fest in New York will also be able to see a full-size model of the Dreadnought at the Call of Duty stand.
Culture Editor
Maya explores gaming, streaming, and the internet as a place where people actually live. From deep-dives into creator economies to the anthropology of digital communities, she tracks platform drama and cultural shifts so you don't have to. She believes the best tech stories are fundamentally about human behavior.
via TechRadar


