At the top of the bustling consumer drone marketplace, two big names have been battling (sometimes litigiously) for dominance. DJI popularized drone flying as a hobby with its Phantom line, but lately, Yuneec has been whittling into DJI's marketshare with its competing Typhoon line. Both company's flagship quadcopters are equipped with excellent video cameras, both are accessibly priced, and both have autonomous and safety-minded features that make flying easy for inexperienced pilots.
So far, DJI remains the market leader. But Yuneec's latest offering, the Typhoon H, may well change that. The company's newest drone isn't just different or stacked with unique features (which it very much is). It's also far more powerful than any other drone in its price range: it costs $1,300, putting nearly head-to-head with the $1,400 DJI Phantom 4.
The first thing that sets the Typhoon H apart: it's a hexacopter, with six rotors instead of the four found on the popular quadcopter design. What's more, the Typhoon H only needs five of those rotors to stay in the air, so if one motor konks out mid-flight, you don't crash or splash. The H also features retractable rotor arms, which cuts down on the size of the transport case and makes it roughly the same size as a typical quadcopter when stowed.
Most drones that come with more than four rotors, such as DJI's Matrice 600, are aimed at professional filmmakers. These hexacopters typically lack an integrated camera flight system, the feature on a consumer drone that lets the pilot use the same camera to both navigate and to capture aerial footage. Instead, these filmmakers' drones have a gimbal where a separate pro movie camera is attached to capture footage. This also means you need two operators—one to fly and one to film.

