Company Description
Dynamic Aerospace Systems (OTCQB: BRQL), formerly known as BrooQLy, Inc., is a Nevada-incorporated company focused on developing advanced aerospace technologies. According to its public communications and SEC filings, the company operates under the trade name Dynamic Aerospace Systems (DAS) and concentrates on unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), unmanned aircraft systems (UAS), and autonomous logistics platforms for military defense, government, security, and commercial applications.
The company states in multiple press releases that its common stock trades on the OTCQB Market under the ticker symbol BRQL. BrooQLy Inc., d/b/a Dynamic Aerospace Systems, has also disclosed in SEC filings that it is organized in the State of Nevada and uses Dynamic Aerospace Systems as its corporate and operating identity. Shareholders approved a change of the corporate name from BrooQLy, Inc. to Dynamic Aerospace Systems, as reported in an 8-K describing the results of the 2025 Annual Meeting.
Business Focus and Operating Segments
In its amended registration statements, the company explains that it uses a management approach to segment reporting and identifies two operating segments:
- Dynamic Aerospace Systems – described as a developer and original equipment manufacturer (OEM) for UAVs.
- Dynamic Deliveries – described as an operator of autonomous mesh logistics networks.
In a shareholder letter and related S-1/A disclosures, the company states that it shifted away from a legacy logistics platform and repositioned itself around UAV manufacturing and autonomous logistics. It reports that this transformation has been driven in part by acquisitions of aerospace-related assets and intellectual property, including technologies associated with vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) UAVs, long-endurance electric rotor platforms, and autonomous delivery networks.
Defense, Government, and Security Applications
Press releases describe Dynamic Aerospace Systems as focusing on advanced drones (UAVs) for military defense and government use. The company highlights platforms and programs aimed at:
- Defense and tactical operations.
- Base and perimeter security.
- Force protection and convoy escort.
- Battlefield resupply and logistics.
- Disaster relief and humanitarian support.
- Law enforcement and close-quarters tactical support.
In an announcement about a demonstration at Strother Field in Kansas, the company outlines several named platforms that form part of its portfolio of military-grade drone systems. These include the G-1 MKII/Overwatch hybrid VTOL, the US-1 MKII/Sentinel unmanned aircraft system, and the Mitigator/Breacher tactical drone. The company describes these systems as intended for surveillance, reconnaissance, tactical missions, and law-enforcement-oriented operations such as building clearance and less-than-lethal payload deployment.
Fortis Class Government Drone Series
Dynamic Aerospace Systems has announced the launch of its "Fortis Class" government drone series, described as a dedicated line of autonomous aerial systems engineered for military, government, and security forces. According to the company’s press materials, the Fortis Class is designed to support mission sets such as intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR), base security, force protection, battlefield resupply, disaster relief, and close-quarters tactical intervention.
The company identifies three principal Fortis platforms:
- The Overwatch (platform base G-1 MKIII hybrid VTOL), described as an extended-endurance hybrid fixed-wing/VTOL platform for long-range ISR and autonomous delivery missions.
- The Sentinel (platform base US-1 MKII multi-copter), described as a fully electric multi-rotor system for convoy escort, perimeter security, and rapid tactical response.
- The Breacher (platform base Mitigator CQB multi-copter), described as a high-speed tactical platform for close-quarters operations and less-than-lethal intervention.
Company communications emphasize attributes such as all-domain versatility, autonomy, mesh networking, modular payloads, and compliance with U.S. defense-related component requirements, including NDAA-focused standards. The Fortis Class is described as being designed and manufactured in Ann Arbor, Michigan, with additional testing activity at Strother Field in Kansas.
Autonomous Logistics and Dynamic Deliveries
Through its Dynamic Deliveries segment, the company describes a strategy centered on autonomous mesh logistics networks. In its shareholder letter and S-1/A, BrooQLy Inc., d/b/a Dynamic Aerospace Systems, reports that it acquired assets from Global Autonomous Corporation (GAC), including an autonomous delivery solution and a licensed Autonomous Mesh Fulfillment Network in Dubai. The company states that these assets support a division focused on using proprietary long-range UAVs for high-frequency, last-mile delivery in urban and semi-rural environments.
Public communications also reference collaborations with Drop Smart Hubs in Greece and Noon, an e-commerce platform in the Middle East. The company describes these collaborations as intended to integrate smart hub infrastructure and UAV technology into autonomous delivery solutions in specific international markets, particularly for e-commerce and logistics use cases.
Intellectual Property and Technology Development
Dynamic Aerospace Systems has announced multiple provisional patent filings that it characterizes as core to its intellectual property portfolio. These filings, as described in a press release, cover areas such as:
- Mesh-based autonomous delivery systems coordinating drones, mobile fulfillment vehicles, kiosks, and e-commerce centers.
- Modular autonomous delivery systems using drone-agnostic delivery vehicles for last-mile optimization.
- Interceptor drones with swarm coordination and low-collateral defeat mechanisms for counter-drone defense.
- Less-than-lethal cartridges designed for mounting on unmanned aerial systems.
- Tactical entry UAS platforms with on-board less-than-lethal effect cartridges and multi-mode EO/IR gimbals.
- Autonomous drone package delivery systems capable of dynamic landing on mobile robotic platforms.
- Autonomous vehicle delivery systems with robotic drone capture for continuous package replenishment.
The company describes these patent filings as supporting its focus on endurance, autonomy, scalability, and integration across logistics, security, and defense markets.
Corporate Transformation and Capital Strategy
In a shareholder letter filed via an S-1/A, the company outlines a strategic transformation from its prior focus to a UAV and autonomous logistics business. It reports that, on April 1, 2025, it completed acquisitions of key assets from Vayu (US) Inc., Impossible Aerospace Corporation, and Global Autonomous Corporation. The company states that these acquisitions provided VTOL UAV technologies, long-endurance electric rotor designs, and autonomous delivery solutions, and that it now operates through the Dynamic Aerospace Systems and Dynamic Deliveries segments.
The same materials discuss the company’s capital structure and financing, including preferred stock series, warrants, and an equity purchase agreement. A later press release describes a $15 million equity purchase agreement with Platinum Point Capital LLC, which the company characterizes as intended to provide flexible access to capital for UAV development and aerospace initiatives, subject to conditions such as registration statement effectiveness.
Corporate Governance and Name Change
BrooQLy Inc., d/b/a Dynamic Aerospace Systems, filed a definitive proxy statement (DEF 14A) describing its 2025 Annual Meeting. The proxy and subsequent 8-K report that shareholders were asked to vote on, and approved, several proposals, including:
- Election of directors.
- Ratification of the independent public accounting firm.
- Authorization to amend the Articles of Incorporation to change the corporate name to Dynamic Aerospace Systems.
- Authorization to effect a reverse stock split within a specified ratio range.
- Approval of executive and general restricted stock unit (RSU) plans.
The 8-K confirms that the proposal to change the company name to Dynamic Aerospace Systems was approved and that the company filed the necessary documentation with the State of Nevada, with the name change becoming effective. The company has also stated in press releases that it intends, subject to conditions and market factors, to pursue an uplisting to the New York Stock Exchange and to transition its ticker symbol from BRQL to DAS in connection with that process. These references are presented as plans and intentions rather than completed events.
Regulatory Status and Exchange
Based on the company’s own statements in press releases and SEC filings, its common stock is quoted on the OTCQB Market under the symbol BRQL. The filings provided do not include forms such as Form 25 or Form 15 that would indicate a completed delisting or deregistration. The company has filed registration statements on Form S-1/A and a definitive proxy statement, which provide additional detail on its capital structure, segment reporting, and governance proposals.
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Short Interest History
Short interest in Brooqly (BRQL) currently stands at 399 shares, up 1000.0% from the previous reporting period, representing 0.0% of the float. Over the past 12 months, short interest has increased by 3890%. This relatively low short interest suggests limited bearish sentiment.
Days to Cover History
Days to cover for Brooqly (BRQL) currently stands at 1.0 days. This low days-to-cover ratio indicates high liquidity, allowing short sellers to quickly exit positions if needed. The days to cover has decreased 99.9% over the past year, suggesting improved liquidity for short covering. The ratio has shown significant volatility over the period, ranging from 1.0 to 1000.0 days.