South Korea just put the world on notice. In a slickly produced video released in February 2026, defence and rail group Hyundai Rotem revealed a concept for an air-launched hypersonic anti-ship cruise missile, built on the same scramjet technology that powers the country's land-based "Hycore" program. The message was blunt: a carrier-killer-class weapon, dropped from a jet, screaming toward a warship faster than Mach 5.
But here is the part the breathless headlines skip. What Hyundai Rotem showed was a concept — a mix of real test footage and digital animation. There has been no flight test of the air-launched variant. What is real, and verified, is the technology underneath it. And that is impressive enough.
Quick Facts
| Revealed | Air-launched hypersonic anti-ship cruise missile concept (Hyundai Rotem) |
| When | Video released February 2026 |
| Status | Concept/animation reveal — not a flight test of the air-launched variant |
| Underlying tech | “Hycore” scramjet; exceeded Mach 6 in a 2024 test |
| Likely platforms | F-15K today; KF-21 Boramae in future |
| Mass-production target | ~2035 (Hyundai Rotem assessment) |
What South Korea actually revealed
The reveal came as a video, first published online, portraying a sleek missile separating from an aircraft, lighting a booster, and streaking toward a surface ship. Per Army Recognition, the footage did not depict a live missile launch but instead presented a conceptual visualization of the air-launched variant. So: a mock-up reveal, not a test.
The air-launched missile is described as a distinct configuration derived from the ground-launched Hycore system. Reporting says the airborne version drops the interstage section used on the land-based round, swaps in a single booster optimized for air launch, and adds larger wings for long-range cruise once the scramjet takes over.

South Korea’s hypersonic cruise missile push, explained.
The real engine: "Hycore"
Strip away the animation and you reach the genuinely hard part — and the genuinely confirmed part. Hycore is a scramjet-powered flight vehicle developed since 2018 by Hyundai Rotem and the state-run Agency for Defense Development (ADD), with Hanwha Aerospace contributing propulsion expertise. It is the technological backbone of the whole missile family.
According to The Korea Times, during a 2024 test launch Hycore exceeded Mach 6 — roughly 7,340 km/h — at an altitude of 23 kilometres. That flight validated the propulsion and thermal-management systems that make sustained hypersonic flight possible.
Scramjets are why this matters. Instead of arcing on a predictable ballistic trajectory, a scramjet-powered cruise missile breathes air and maneuvers at speeds above Mach 5 deep inside the atmosphere — compressing a defender's reaction time to seconds and complicating interception. That is the whole point of a carrier-killer.
Why Seoul wants a fighter-launched hypersonic punch
The strategic logic is regional and stark. China fields anti-ship ballistic missiles and is advancing hypersonic glide vehicles. Russia has operationalized the Zircon. North Korea named hypersonics a national priority back in 2021 and has been test-firing ever since. South Korea does not want to be the odd one out.
An air-launched variant is the flexible card. Hung under a jet, it extends reach far beyond fixed launch sites and lets Seoul project maritime strike power into contested waters. Reporting points to the F-15K as a near-term carrier and the indigenous KF-21 Boramae as a future platform — the same fighter South Korea is already clearing for an expanding air-to-ground arsenal.
A reality check on the timeline
Now for the cold water. Hyundai Rotem's own internal assessment, reported by The Korea Times, points to mass production around 2035 — not next year. ADD has spoken of completing remaining technical tasks toward the end of the decade, with deployment in the early-to-mid 2030s. One March 2026 analysis warned that full-rate production could realistically slip toward the mid-2040s.
Quoted performance figures — Mach 6-plus, a roughly 800-km total strike range combining powered cruise and hypersonic glide — come from program reporting and should be read as targets, not certified results. Hycore has flown and exceeded Mach 6; the weaponized, air-launched anti-ship missile has not.
The honest takeaway: South Korea has crossed the genuinely difficult propulsion threshold, and it is now openly advertising where it wants to take that technology. The animation is a statement of intent. The Mach 6 flight is the receipt. Turning the two into an operational fighter-launched carrier-killer is the decade-long job that starts now.
Sources: Army Recognition (Feb 2026); The Korea Times (Mar 2026); The War Zone; Aviation Week; Seoul Economic Daily.
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