This video documents another wave of Russia’s attack on Dnipro, where emergency crews were already working at the site of an earlier strike. According to Ukrainian officials cited by Reuters and AP, the city was hit in multiple waves over more than 20 hours, leaving at least 8 people dead and around 49 injured in Dnipro alone. Children were among the wounded, and apartment buildings, businesses, and other civilian sites were damaged.
The attack formed part of a broader overnight assault on Ukraine that also hit other regions, including Chernihiv and Odesa. In the final part of the video, the moment of impact on a gas station on the outskirts of Dnipro can be seen.
This is what life looks like in the frontline settlement of Komyshuvakha, according to footage shared on social media.
People here are not truly living — they are simply trying to survive under постоянне shelling and constant attacks, with every day shaped by danger, destruction, and uncertainty.
Russia launched a mass overnight drone-and-missile attack across Ukraine, with Kyiv, Odesa, Dnipro, and Kharkiv among the hardest-hit cities. Ukrainian officials said Kyiv was struck in four districts, with at least a dozen people killed nationwide, including a 12-year-old child in the capital, while dozens more were wounded. Residential buildings, civilian infrastructure, and non-residential sites were damaged as emergency crews fought fires across multiple locations.
In Kyiv, debris hit a multi-story residential building, and another strike caused a fire on the first floor of a separate apartment building. Odesa reported seven dead and 11 injured in multiple waves of attack, while Dnipro and Kharkiv also suffered casualties and damage to homes, vehicles, and infrastructure. Explosions and strike reports also came from other regions as Russia carried out one of its largest recent aerial assaults on civilian areas.
Russian forces struck Kherson with a guided aerial bomb, which landed near a public transport stop where civilians were present. The attack caused fatalities.
A city that once moved to the rhythm of industry and everyday life has now become one of the hottest spots in the Donetsk region. Before the full-scale invasion, more than 67,000 people lived here. By the end of March 2026, only around 2,000 residents remained in the city after months of heavy strikes and destruction.
Attacks have not stopped: guided bombs, artillery, and kamikaze drones continue to hit residential neighborhoods on a daily basis.
This is what Kamyshuvakha looks like now — a stark field report from the situation on the ground. Destroyed streets, ruined homes, and visible infrastructure damage show the devastating conflict impact on cities and affected communities.
What was once a living town has been reduced to devastation, serving as grim war documentation of the destruction spreading across urban frontline areas in Ukraine.
An FPV drone attack by Russian forces struck a group of civilians during a volunteer evacuation in Beryslav, Kherson Oblast. As a result of the strike, a 43-year-old man was killed, and three others were wounded. Due to constant Russian artillery surveillance and fire, the evacuation group was only able to leave the area after two and a half days. The incident highlights the extreme danger faced by civilians and volunteers during evacuations in frontline areas.
This is Velyka Pysarivka in northern Ukraine. Used to be a home for almost 4k people. Then russians decided to erase it with carpet bombings in the last several days — just because they can.