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VC Eclipse has a new $1.3B fund to back — and build — ‘physical AI’ startups

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Why This Matters

Eclipse's new $1.3 billion fund signals a strategic shift towards 'physical AI,' emphasizing investments in startups that integrate artificial intelligence with tangible, real-world applications across sectors like transportation, energy, and infrastructure. This focus highlights the industry's move to embed advanced AI into physical systems, promising transformative impacts on daily life and industrial processes.

Key Takeaways

It takes just a skim of Eclipse’s recent investments to see where this venture firm’s interests lie — and where it is headed.

The Palo Alto-based VC, which saw its median deal size explode over the past several years, has poured an increasing amount of money into the “physical world.” Its deals include electric boat developer Arc, buzzy battery recycling and material firm Redwood Materials, self-driving construction vehicle startup Bedrock Robotics, autonomous vehicle tech company Wayve, and industrial robotics lab Mind Robotics.

With $1.3 billion in fresh capital — which is split between a $591 million early-stage incubation fund and one more oriented toward growth startups — Eclipse is zeroing in on what partner Jiten Behl describes as the next big technological era.

“Over the last two decades, we’ve seen multiple waves of innovation,” Behl said, listing the internet, mobile cloud, and social media eras. “This is the first time where stuff is going to move from our screens into the physical world; we’re going to see advanced levels of intelligence, along with actual actions, in terms of solving problems in the real, physical world.”

AI and the physical world have collided; the ubiquity of the term “physical AI” is just one signal. Behl said this era is being propelled by a confluence of talent, technological advancements, demand, and policy. And, of course, capital.

“We have a nice war chest to go and make a serious dent in the market and support the companies in the right way across the life cycle,” he said.

Eclipse isn’t breaking new ground by investing in physical AI. It is, after all, the next shiny new thing to invest in. How Eclipse picks startups is worth noting. The VC is looking to invest across all physical sectors, including transportation, energy, infrastructure, compute, and defense. The interesting part, as Behl described it, is a strategy to build a web, or ecosystem of startups in overlapping fields that will likely become partners as they scale.

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