 Drones crowding Ukrainian skies paralyze hostilities. They turn grey areas into death zones. As the sky above the war zone in Ukraine are patrolled by countless drones hunting for any sign of movement, Ukrainian and Russian forces have little to no way to move across the battlefield without being spotted and killed. The Washington Post reported this. The Ukrainian military noted that the growing number of small drones in Ukraine has turned the area on both sides of the line of contact, commonly referred to as the grey zone, into a death zone. This means that those who dare to move day or night under the watchful eye of adversary drones are immediately killed. Journalists reported that the cheap drones deployed in Ukraine have transformed modern warfare and initially gave Ukrainian forces an advantage on the battlefield. However, the Russians swiftly caught on and commenced large-scale production of their own drones. Experts termed the current stage of the war the Blitzkrieg drone warfare and admit that it is a stalemate, as if any person is out in the open they are immediately hunted. But the saturation of drones, many with thermal cameras that work at night, has also shrunk the space where troops can move safely without being spotted. Leading to high casualties and in recent months, largely preventing either side from making major breakthroughs, the Washington Post said. Cheap drones deployed in Ukraine have transformed modern warfare and initially gave Ukrainian troops an advantage on the battlefield, where they are perpetually outnumbered and outgunned. This is the evolution of our survival. Oleksandr Nastenko, commander of code 9.2, a drone unit in Ukraine's 92nd Brigade said. But the Russians quickly caught on and began mass producing their own drones. What followed was an overabundance of disposable deadly drones and electronic warfare devices known as jammers that disrupt their flights. Most common are first-person view or FPV drones typically controlled by a pilot wearing a headset and holding a remote controller. The technological advances probably have saved lives because drone pilots can work slightly farther from the zero or contact line than traditional infantry. But the saturation of drones, many with thermal cameras that work at night, has also shrunk the space where troops can move safely without being spotted, leading to high casualties and in recent months largely preventing either side from making major breakthroughs. A rocket attack has been launched on Ukraine's occupied city of Luhansk, local telegram channels reported. An explosion occurred on the territory of the machine-building plant where the armored vehicles of the occupying Russian army were stationed as a result of the strike from storm-shadow-slash-scalp missiles provided as a military aid from the United Kingdom. One of the rockets reportedly landed in the area of the bus station. Overall, the city was hit by three missiles. There have been no reports about casualties and the destroyed military equipment.