Aston Martin Dreadnought Brings V12 SUV Mayhem to Call of Duty Modern Warfare 4
Aston Martin is stepping into the gaming world with something that looks more ready for a war zone than a valet stand. The new Aston Martin Dreadnought is a wild V12-powered SUV created in partnership with Infinity Ward and Activision for Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4. Unlike the DBX or any other Aston SUV you can actually buy, the Dreadnought will live exclusively in the digital world, giving players a heavily armored, luxury-grade off-road machine built for combat rather than country clubs.
The Dreadnought blends Aston Martin’s performance image with full tactical fantasy. It is described as having all-wheel drive, a V12 powertrain, supercar-level performance, robust armor, and adaptive combat zone intelligence systems. Since this is a video game vehicle, Aston Martin and the Call of Duty team were free to push the concept well beyond the limits of production reality. The result is a two-door SUV that feels like part supertruck, part military scout vehicle, and part Bond villain escape machine.
Visually, the Dreadnought goes hard on aggression. Its carbon-fiber body features sharp angles, crisp surfacing, massive fenders, a wide stance, and oversized off-road tires tucked beneath trapezoidal arches. Up front, three-tier LED lighting elements sit deep within the bodywork, while a rectangular grille, square spotlights, tow hooks, and a silver skid plate give it a properly hostile face. It still carries enough Aston Martin design DNA to feel premium, but this is clearly the brand filtered through a combat lens.
The rear is even more dramatic, with a ducktail-style spoiler, slatted louvers replacing a traditional rear window, exposed tires, quad exhaust outlets, and a departure angle that looks ready for serious digital terrain. The taillights use stacked LED elements that call back to some of Aston Martin’s more extreme limited-run performance cars, including models like the Vulcan, Valiant, and Valour. Nothing about the Dreadnought is subtle, but that makes sense for a vehicle meant to stand out in a fast-moving game environment.
Inside, Aston Martin keeps the luxury theme alive while leaning into a tactical atmosphere. The cabin uses military green leather across the dashboard, seats, and steering wheel, while metallic gold accents appear on the badge, stitching, trim, and gear selector. An octagonal steering wheel, circular gauges, and a slim digital display panel across the dashboard give the interior a futuristic look without completely abandoning traditional Aston Martin character.
Aston Martin has no plans to build the Dreadnought for production, although a full-size model is being shown at Fanatics Fest in New York. In Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4, players will be able to find and use the vehicle at key points of interest in modes such as DMZ and Warzone when the game launches globally on October 23, 2026. It may be digital-only, but the Dreadnought is still an interesting glimpse at how automakers are using gaming to stretch brand identity, reach new audiences, and have a little fun without worrying about crash tests, emissions rules, or production budgets.
