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There are two general cases where drones are useful (for combat, not just surveillance): Swarms and tactical/targeted strikes.
For a swarm? It is literally any other artillery barrage. You either find shelter or you die. It is just a case of the attackers spending a lot more money so that they don't have easily detectable artillery pieces (or man portable mortars) to lug around
For targeted strikes? The advantage there is that quadrotors (et al) aren't easily detectable by humans when they are high up in the air (shockingly easy for the kinds of mics that are already used to triangulate gunfire though... and there is some university research to amplify specific frequencies for "tactical" headphones). This means that an operator can essentially hover even 20-30 feet up above a target and then either drop the payload or fly it in.
At which point it is literally the same defense as mortars. The fancy kind of netting to reduce the effectiveness of airburst munitions (and prevent drones from reaching the juicy bit). Trenches/foxholes to minimize the damage caused by any one detonation. And... just closing the damned door on the APC.
What you are describing is something we mostly only see in video games and the Drone Racing League. The idea that you get above your target, swoop down, and do a trench run through the hallways to get to your high value target.
First? That pretty much gets stopped immediately if people just close doors and windows.
But more importantly? You need to be a DAMNED good pilot to do that at speed so that you can't be stopped in time. And you need ridiculously effective real time intel. Because if that HVT walked down the hallway to inappropriately flirt with Private Pyle? Your ace drone pilot is now blowing up a few random admins and not the Super General or whatever.
Which more or less becomes the same issues as mortars but with an added bit of snipers: "Important" people don't stand near windows.
Drones, like mortars, are still pretty effective at harassing infantry and breaking up (poorly) entrenched positions. One of the most infamous examples of this is the Benghazi embassy attack. Most reports (so grain of salt) put the contractors as being REALLY good at shooting back. But when the attackers did a bit of math (allegedly weeks earlier...) and dropped mortars on their asses, it basically collapsed the defenses.
And... obviously drones are super effective at going after civilian targets. Same as mortars (or high angle grenade launchers, according to a certain nazi running for the Senate in Maine...).
But this is also something we "solved" back in World War 1 and 2. Which... is a big chunk of why the war in Ukraine is a lot closer to a WW2 battlefield than not.