Latest news
Cheer Games closes $4.5M pre-seed round for mobile gaming platform
Cheer Games, a mobile puzzle game studio, has raised $4.5 million in a pre-seed
funding round led by Makers Fund, with participation from Play Ventures and a
group of angel investors.
Founded
by former senior leaders from AppLovin’s Lion Studios, Cheer Games was
established by Emre Gercel (CEO), Berkay Ozturk (CPO), Ertan Ünver (CTO), and
Kutay Koralturk (CMO). The founding team previously worked together on
successful mobile titles, including the puzzle game Hexa Sort, and brings
experience across game design, product development, growth, and business
strategy.
Emre
Gercel said the company was founded with the ambition to build enduring game
franchises and a long-lasting studio:
We
started Cheer because we believed we could build something more durable than
the industry's short-term thinking allows for. To build games that become
franchises and studios that become institutions. Barcelona gives us the global
stage, our Turkish roots give us the hunger, and this team gives me complete
confidence that we'll deliver.
Cheer
Games focuses on developing casual puzzle games for smartphones, with the goal
of building scalable intellectual property and long-lasting mobile game
franchises. The studio aims to create engaging gameplay experiences while
applying a structured, product-driven approach to game development.
Headquartered
in Barcelona, Cheer Games is building a focused team with experience from
leading European gaming companies. By combining expertise in game design, live
operations, product development, and growth, the studio aims to develop a
portfolio of puzzle games designed for global mobile audiences.
The
funding will be used to accelerate the development of upcoming mobile puzzle
titles and expand the Barcelona headquarters by hiring additional global
talent.
Wilbe opens White City lab in London to remove infrastructure bottlenecks for science startups
Wilbe, the venture fund and platform that trains and backs scientists to build companies from day one, today announces the launch of its first dedicated lab facility in White City, London.
To date, Wilbe has trained more than 1,400 scientists, backed 22 companies, and helped create over $1.3 billion in value worldwide.
However, through its venture programme and fund, Wilbe has repeatedly seen the same bottleneck emerge: founders raise early capital, but struggle to find venture-appropriate lab space quickly enough to maintain momentum.
By adding physical lab infrastructure to its existing training and investment platform, Wilbe can now support scientists end-to-end: from learning how to build, securing capital, and helping them solve their accommodation challenges so they can focus on uncovering world-changing science.
While this is Wilbe’s first physical lab for multiple occupiers, it builds on years of hands-on experience designing, fitting out and operating laboratory spaces for early-stage science companies across the UK and Europe.
The White City Place facility, developed by asset manager Stanhope, is located within The WestWorks building. It will support 10–15 companies and up to 80 people, across fully fitted wet labs, offices and meeting rooms. Designed by and for scientist founders, Wilbe’s space offers ready-to-use, flexible infrastructure for companies from pre-seed to Series B.
Laboratories are fully operational from day one, allowing teams to begin experimental work immediately rather than losing time to fit-outs or procurement.
With Imperial College London, NHS trusts and an established biotech and deep-tech cluster embedded in the district, founders benefit from daily proximity to collaborators, talent and early customers - the kind of ecosystem where scientific ideas compound faster because the people advancing them work side by side.
Wilbe plans to expand into additional UK and international hubs, including Zurich, Berlin, San Francisco and Austin, with a second London site expected to focus on robotics.
Ale Maiano, co-founder and CEO of Wilbe, said:
“For years, we helped scientists raise capital and build companies, only to watch them hit the same wall: there was nowhere exciting to go once they left academia. Wilbe Labs exists to remove that friction and institutionalised mindset. It’s not about real estate, it’s about giving scientist founders the infrastructure they need, when they need it and to help them move with speed. If we want more world-class science companies to be built here, we have to make it easier for scientists to get building and to perform beyond what is expected.”
French quantum startup Pasqal to go public via SPAC at $2BN valuation
A French quantum computing startup co-founded by a Nobel Prize winner is going public via a SPAC (Special Purpose Acquisition Company), with a $2bn valuation. Pasqal is merging with SPAC vehicle Bleichroeder Acquisition Corp II, with the deal expected to close in the second half of 2026, with the new entity to list on the US Nasdaq stock market.
The deal values Pasqal at a $2bn pre-money valuation. The deal marks the latest in several quantum startups going public via a SPAC, as the alternative route for startups to go public gathers momentum.
The deal could add more than $600m to Pasqal's coffers, details of the deal, which also cites a planned dual European listing on Euronext, show.
Wasiq Bokhari, CEO Pasqal, said: “Pasqal brings a combination of some of the world’s leading neutral atom quantum computing technology, deep customer traction, commercial scaling and solid sovereign support.
“This funding gives us the fuel to further cement our leadership in the quantum computing industry as a global shareholder-focused French company.”
Michel Combes and Andrew Gundlach, co-sponsors of Bleichroeder Acquisition Corp II, said: “Pasqal has already deployed quantum computers globally and is delivering real-world capability today.
"We believe this partnership provides the capital and platform to accelerate Pasqal’s growth as a global leader in neutral atom quantum computing."
Paris-headquartered Pasqal, which employs 275 people, is a full-stack quantum computing company.
Pasqal constructs quantum processors using ordered neutral atoms in 2D and 3D arrays, enabling practical quantum advantages for its customers and addressing real-world problems, it says.
The 2019-founded startup is backed by Temasek, the European Innovation Council (EIC) Fund and LG Electronics. It was co-founded by Alain Aspect, who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2022. Other recent SPAC quantum deals include Xanadu Quantum Technologies and IQM.
From energy transition to deeptech growth: the Swedish tech ecosystem
In 2025, European tech investment reached €72 billion,
making it the second-strongest year of the past three. Sweden raised €4.1 billion, ranking fifth among European countries by total funding.
Investment in Sweden was concentrated in capital-intensive
sectors, with a limited number of large transactions accounting for a
significant share of total funding. Hardware and energy attracted the highest
levels of capital, reflecting strong activity in data infrastructure, power
systems, and clean energy technologies, and highlighting Sweden’s role in
industrial and sustainability-focused innovation.
Software and health technology formed a second tier of
activity, supported by a steady stream of mid-sized venture and growth rounds.
Software funding spanned digital platforms, enterprise tools, and product
development, while healthtech investment continued to support advances in
medical technology and digital healthcare.
Transportation technologies linked to electric mobility and
logistics also attracted meaningful capital, reinforcing the country’s focus on
industrial innovation. Meanwhile, sectors such as fintech and legal technology
remained active but comparatively smaller in scale.
Emerging fields, including
artificial intelligence, quantum technologies, and cleantech, recorded
consistent early- and mid-stage funding, signalling growing investor interest
despite more limited capital deployment relative to the leading sectors (for
more detailed analyses of the European technology ecosystem, check out
Tech.eu’s annual report: European Tech 2025-The Big Picture).
Here are the 10 companies that raised the most in 2025.
Amount raised in 2025: €1.05B
EcoDataCenter is a Swedish digital infrastructure company that designs, builds, and operates sustainable data centers for cloud computing, high-performance computing (HPC), and artificial intelligence workloads.
The company focuses on combining high-performance infrastructure with renewable energy and energy-efficient design, including advanced cooling systems and circular energy solutions. Its facilities in Sweden support large-scale compute operations for enterprises and technology companies while aiming to reduce the environmental impact of data center operations.
In 2025, EcoDataCenter secured €1.05 billion over two financing rounds to expand its Falun and Borlänge campuses, strengthening sustainable high-performance infrastructure for AI and cloud.
Amount raised in 2025: €500M
Elvy is an energy technology company that provides integrated home energy solutions through a subscription model.
The company installs and operates systems including solar panels, heat pumps, and battery storage, offering homeowners a fixed monthly energy plan that covers installation, maintenance, and system management.
By combining hardware with software-driven optimisation, Elvy aims to reduce household energy costs, increase energy self-sufficiency, and simplify the adoption of renewable energy technologies.
Elvy secured a €500 million financing package in 2025 to fund home energy packages offered through a monthly subscription model.
Amount raised in 2025: €470M
Lovable is an AI software company that develops a platform for building websites and applications using natural language. Founded in 2023 by Anton Osika and Fabian Hedin, the company enables users to generate full-stack software by describing what they want to create, with AI producing the underlying code, backend, and deployment setup. The platform is designed to simplify software development and help individuals, startups, and teams rapidly prototype and launch digital products.
Lovable raised approximately €470 million across multiple funding rounds to scale its AI-powered no-code platform, expand product capabilities, accelerate growth, and drive broader adoption of its software-building tools for non-developers.
Amount raised in 2025: $260M
Neko Health is a health-technology company developing preventive healthcare solutions using advanced sensors, AI, and data analytics.
Founded in 2018, the company offers non-invasive full-body health scans that collect millions of data points to assess skin, cardiovascular, and metabolic health. Its platform combines scanning technology, blood testing, and doctor consultations to detect early signs of disease and help shift healthcare toward prevention and early diagnosis.
In 2025, Neko Health raised $260 million in Series B funding for preventative health scanning tech.
Amount raised in 2025: €200M
Legora is a legal technology company that develops AI-powered software designed to support lawyers and legal teams.
The company provides a collaborative AI workspace that helps legal professionals review documents, conduct research, draft contracts, and manage complex legal workflows more efficiently. Its platform integrates with existing tools and legal data sources, enabling law firms and in-house teams to automate routine tasks while improving the speed and accuracy of legal work.
In 2025, Legora raised €200 million over two rounds to accelerate product development, scale operations, and deepen its presence in core markets.
Amount raised in 2025: $200M
Polestar is an electric vehicle manufacturer focused on premium performance cars powered by battery-electric technology.
The company designs, develops, and sells electric vehicles that combine Scandinavian design, advanced software, and sustainable materials. Headquartered in Sweden, Polestar operates globally and aims to accelerate the transition to sustainable mobility through innovative EV products and digital-first sales models.
Polestar secured $200 million in 2025 to support working capital needs and general corporate purposes.
Amount raised in 2025: €170M
Froda is a fintech company that provides digital financing solutions for small and medium-sized businesses.
Founded in 2015, the company uses data-driven technology and machine learning to offer fast, fully digital business loans and embedded financing services through partner platforms. Froda’s platform enables entrepreneurs to access capital quickly and on transparent terms, with the goal of improving access to financing for SMEs across Europe.
Froda raises €170 million in 2025 over two rounds, to fuel European expansion.
Amount raised in 2025: €150M
Aira is a clean energy technology company that provides integrated home energy solutions designed to reduce household emissions and energy costs.
The company installs and operates systems centred on heat pumps, alongside solar panels, batteries, and smart energy management software. Aira’s platform combines hardware, installation, and monitoring to help households transition from gas-based heating to more efficient electric systems across Europe.
In 2025, Aira secured €150 million to accelerate its mission to take Europe off gas.
Amount raised in 2025: €108M
Qvantum is an energy technology company that develops and manufactures heat pumps and integrated heating and cooling systems designed for sustainable buildings and urban energy networks.
The company combines hardware and software to deliver energy-efficient solutions that help decarbonise heating and cooling in homes, apartment buildings, and cities. Qvantum’s systems are designed to integrate with modern district heating networks and support the transition to low-carbon energy infrastructure.
In 2025, Qvantum raised €108 million to expand production and grow across Europe.
Amount raised in 2025: $100M
Einride is a technology company that develops digital, electric, and autonomous solutions for road transport.
Founded in 2016, the company provides an end-to-end platform that combines electric and autonomous trucks, charging infrastructure, and AI-driven logistics software to help businesses move goods more efficiently and reduce emissions. Einride’s technology is designed to accelerate the transition from diesel-based freight to sustainable, data-driven transportation systems
In 2025, Einride raised $100 million to support the expansion of its Saga platform, accelerate autonomous vehicle deployments, and fund international growth.
UniverCell lands €30M Series B to advance European lithium-ion cell manufacturing
UniverCell, a European manufacturer of high-performance lithium-ion battery cells and electrodes, has raised a €30 million Series B financing round.
The round was co-led by the DeepTech & Climate Fonds (DTCF), IKA and WIKA, with strong support from the European Innovation Council (EIC) Fund.
Founded in 2019 in Kiel, Germany, UniverCell has grown into an industrial-scale battery manufacturer with more than 82 employees.
The company operates a gigafactory in Northern Germany with production capacity ready to scale beyond 1.5 GWh, focusing on custom-made lithium-ion cells and electrodes for high-performance special applications, including satellites and space systems, and critical care medical devices.
UniverCell’s competitive advantage lies in its deep mastery of industrial production processes, particularly in electrode manufacturing and cell assembly—including 21700 cylindrical cells with a tabless design, lightweight aluminium housings, and process-stable formation—the central performance driver of lithium-ion batteries. All anodes and cathodes are developed and produced in-house, enabling high reproducibility, low scrap rates, and fast changeover times for customer-specific projects.
“At the heart of every high-performance battery is a production process you truly control,” said Marius Strack, co-founder of UniverCell.
“Our focus has always been on industrial execution and scalable manufacturing in Europe.”
A key technological differentiator is UniverCell’s industrial dry-coating process for electrodes. Compared to conventional wet coating methods, dry coating significantly reduces energy consumption, chemical usage, and CO₂ emissions, while improving electrode microstructure and overall cell performance in terms of energy density, charging capability, and cycle life.
“Dry coating allows us to combine performance, cost efficiency, and sustainability at an industrial scale,” said Dr Stefan Permien, co-founder of UniverCell.
“This is increasingly critical as regulatory and environmental requirements continue to rise.”
In strategic collaboration with IKA, a leading manufacturer of innovative process technology, the company is conducting a comprehensive development program in the field of dry coating, encompassing further development, piloting, and large-scale series production.
“We are impressed with UniverCells' entrepreneurial journey over the last few years. Stefan and Marius have continuously grown the business through collaborations with industrial players, and they built substantial knowledge and relationships over the years. Now, we are looking forward to supporting their next step of business development for assembling their proprietary cells,” said Dr Elisabeth Schrey, Venture Partner at DTCF.
“The European Battery sector is in a critical situation with pressure from Chinese JVs. At the same time electrification in high performance applications shows a promising opportunity to create a local champion and secure independent supply chains.”
Svetoslava Georgieva, Chair of the EIC Fund Board, said:
“UniverCell represents exactly the kind of European deep-tech champion the EIC Fund was created to support. The company combines strong technological differentiation with clear industrial relevance in one of Europe’s most strategic value chains. The Company has made impressive progress in translating advanced battery technology into commercial traction.”
The new capital will be used to scale production capacity, further advance UniverCell’s proprietary electrode and cell technologies, and strengthen competitive, sustainable battery cell manufacturing in Europe.
FIRSTPICK raises €25M to find the Baltics’ next breakout founders
Vilnius-based first-check VC fund FIRSTPICK has launched a new €25 million fund focused on early-stage investments.
The aim is to support Baltic founders who don’t fit the typical VC mold. No FAANG background or Ivy League degree needed.
In a startup ecosystem where half of the founders are starting their first company, this approach is about finding and supporting underpriced talent, giving local teams a real shot before the rest of the market catches on. Instead of relying on recognisable CVs or previous high-profile experience, FIRSTPICK will back people whose grit and ideas stand out well before the industry takes notice.
“It’s not so different from the fairy godmother who knew Cinderella before the ball,” says Andra Bagdonaitė, a partner at FIRSTPICK.
“Everyone wants to back success once it’s visible and on the biggest stage, but we prefer to meet founders while they’re still hustling below the radar. It’s about recognising the real work and character behind the scenes.”
Over the years, the fund has built a record of finding potential outside what the mainstream expects. One example is their early investment in Emile Radyte, who founded Samphire Neuroscience in 2023. Samphire offers science-backed support for period pain, low mood, and brain fog. When FIRSTPICK invested, the product was still in the development stage and the risk was high.
Today, Samphire is selling products with thousands of clients in Europe and the US. The company has also recently raised a $5 million seed round led by Inventure.
Along similar lines, Copla is a cybersecurity compliance company led by a proven team and serial entrepreneur Aurimas Bakas. But when Copla was first building its product, the idea was still very early and few investors paid attention. FIRSTPICK became their first investor in their €650,000 pre-seed round, supporting their thesis before most others were ready. Copla has since closed a €6 million Series A round. FIRSTPICK’s new fund will focus on the earliest stages of new startups throughout the Baltics, supporting teams from inception and pre-seed.
Backed by local entrepreneurs, angels, and founders of companies like Tesonet, Oberlo, and Kilo , the fund will target high-potential areas in AI-first software.
This is the second early-stage fund from FIRSTPICK. Their first, a €20 million fund, was launched in 2022. The fund is also backed by Lithuania’s Ministry of Economy and Innovation and the Lithuanian state-financed ILTE fund.
“We are continuing our collaboration with FirstPick, having witnessed their strong ability to professionally select and nurture early-stage companies,” says Tadas Gudaitis, Member of the Board at ILTE and Head of Business Development unit.
“As a strategic investor with a €9 million commitment, our role is not only to provide capital, but also to encourage the involvement of private investors. We believe that this partnership will help ensure a consistent funding pipeline for high-growth-potential startups — from acceleration to later stages of development — and will strengthen Lithuania’s innovation ecosystem in the long term.”
Ultimately, FIRSTPICK’s aim is to help the Baltic tech sector take a bigger role in boosting the region’s economic future, starting with overlooked founders.
“We see our investments as the start of a wider impact,” says Dmitrij Sosunov, managing partner at FIRSTPICK.
“When the Baltic tech sector grows, the entire economy becomes stronger. Our goal is to help the best people kickstart their ideas right here, and build resilient businesses that benefit the whole region.”
Shape the Next Decade: VivaTech 2026 Startup Challenges are Now Open! [Sponsored]
Paris is set to host the 10th-anniversary edition of VivaTech from June 17 to 20, 2026. Since its launch in 2016 by Publicis Groupe and Les Échos-Le Parisien Groupe, VivaTech has cemented its position as one of Europe’s largest startup events and tech event, drawing disruptive minds and global leaders. This year, it will welcome an even larger audience in a new, expanded format within Hall 7 at Paris Expo Porte de Versailles, including a spectacular new 2,000-seat main stage. With Germany as the Country of the Year, the 2026 edition promises to be the biggest yet, building on the success of 2025 which saw 180,000 attendees and over 640,000 business connections.
The Startup Challenges: Your Golden Ticket to Global Scale
The core of the VivaTech experience is the Startup Challenges, an open innovation laboratory designed to connect startups with C-level executives, global investors, and corporate giants. By participating, founders gain direct collaboration on concrete industry problems, unrivaled networking with over 3,600 investors, global visibility in front of key players and media, and crucial market validation that often leads to long-term partnerships or funding rounds.
The 2026 Challenges are structured around five strategic pillars, inviting innovators to lead the shifts defining the future:
Building the Future of Cloud and Digital Infrastructure: Focusing on robust, energy-efficient, and decentralized digital sovereignty and security.
Driving Sustainable and Energy-Efficient Innovation: Highlighting startups in decarbonization, circular economy, and green energy to accelerate a regenerative future.
Accelerating AI-Driven Transformation: Seeking innovations that use AI to boost productivity, reinvent customer experiences, and solve societal problems.
Empowering the Next Generation of Women Founders: The Female Founder Award is back to close the funding gap and provide maximum visibility to women-led startups.
Unlocking Innovation Potential Across Africa: The AfricaTech Award will continue to showcase the vitality of African innovation across sectors like Fintech, AgTech, and HealthTech.
Previous challenge winners have secured massive partnerships and funding, proving that a single application can be the launchpad for global success. Don’t miss your chance to define the next decade of technology.
Apply today for the VivaTech 2026 Startup Challenges!
Key Details:
Event: VivaTech 2026 (10th Anniversary)
Dates: 17-20 June 2026
Location: Paris Expo Porte de Versailles
European Tech.eu Pulse: key trends and investment in February
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Our versions offer a glimpse into the valuable insights provided by our monthly reports, covering key investment trends, notable company activities, and emerging industry sectors.
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February funding rebounds to €7.8B as UK startups capture the lion’s share of European capital
A total of 296 deals were recorded, including 11 rounds above €100 million, with Nscale’s €1.18 billion debt financing standing as the month’s largest transaction.Click to read the rest of the news.
Fibionic secures €3M for lightweight bionic technology
Austrian deeptech
startup fibionic has closed a €3 million seed financing round led by Redstone
together with Euregio+, Caesar, and Leap435, with additional support from
several angel investors.
Lightweight
materials are widely regarded as a key technology across industries, including
sports equipment, UAVs, robotics, industrial applications, and mobility.
However, manufacturing processes, material efficiency, and automation in
composite production often remain inefficient.
fibionic addresses
this challenge with its patented technology, “fibionic fiber placement” (FFP),
a nature-inspired approach to precise fiber placement. Based on bionic
principles, the technology aligns fibers along actual load paths, drawing
inspiration from natural structures such as dragonfly wings.
According to the
company, FFP enables highly efficient and sustainable production with cycle
times of up to one minute per component, establishing a new benchmark for
process optimisation in composite manufacturing.
The technology
enables the production of high-performance, stable components while minimising
material usage. Through this approach, fibionic aims to make lightweight
engineering more economical, sustainable, and suitable for series production
across industries, including automotive, sporting goods, aerospace, robotics,
and defence.
With fibionic, we
are taking high-performance lightweight engineering to the next level. We
enable the fast, sustainable and cost-efficient production of extremely
high-performing, ultra-light products,
said Elias Hirschbichler, co-founder at fibionic.
In partnership
with the Italian bicycle saddle manufacturer Selle Italia, the company has
begun producing products at scale using the FFP process to optimise weight,
stability, and material efficiency. According to fibionic, the technology can
reduce material use by up to 60% and lower product weight by up to 50%.
With the new
funding, fibionic plans to expand its industrial processes and further develop
its proprietary technology platform.
The company also
plans to grow its engineering and business development teams, advance pilot
projects to full-scale production, and further develop its ecosystem across
simulation, equipment, materials, licensing, and software tools.
Belgian logistics startup Vectrix raises €1.15M seed funding
Antwerp-based
Vectrix, an order entry platform for the logistics sector, has raised €1.15
million in a seed funding round led by RDY Ventures to expand into European
markets, starting with Belgium’s neighbouring countries.
Logistics
companies handle large volumes of transport requests each day, with
administrative teams often manually entering order details into transport
management systems. This repetitive process can take several minutes per
request and leaves room for human error.
Founded
in 2024 by Dimitri Allaert and Ben Selleslagh, Vectrix aims to address this
challenge by using AI to automate the manual entry of transport orders. The
platform reduces processing time from around eight minutes to approximately two
minutes per order while also helping to minimise errors.
As the
system processes more data, it continues to learn, enabling it to identify
inconsistencies and suggest corrections, for example, when specific requirements
such as temperature conditions for pharmaceutical transport are involved.
Ben
Selleslagh, CTO at Vectrix, explained that operational workflows differ between
transport companies and that customer agreements are often tailored to
individual clients:
Vectrix’s
AI understands each customer’s context, so it can complete missing information
in a targeted way. The logistics employee always stays in control and can
adjust where needed. That feedback loop helps the AI improve continuously. The
efficiency gains help transport companies absorb the talent shortage, and new
hires get up to speed faster, too.
The
platform operates as a pre–transport management system (pre-TMS) layer within
the IT infrastructure. It converts unstructured input, such as emails or data
from ERP systems, into validated information ready for use in transport
management systems.
Each
automated decision remains transparent and is based on customer configurations,
historical data, and defined operating procedures, allowing logistics teams to
review and approve pre-filled transport orders through a single interface.
The new funding will
support team expansion, European growth, and further product development,
including deeper integrations with transport management systems.
Silverflow raises $40M Series B to expand cloud-native payments platform
Silverflow, a cloud-native
payment processing company, has closed a $40 million Series B funding round led
by Picus Capital, with participation from Rabo Investments and existing
investors Inkef, Global PayTech Ventures, Crane Venture Partners, and Coatue.
Founded in Amsterdam, Silverflow
provides a cloud-native card payment processing platform designed to modernise
payment infrastructure. Its platform offers a single API connection directly to
card networks, enabling payment service providers (PSPs), acquirers, payment
facilitators, and merchants to process transactions while accessing enriched
payment data and real-time insights.
By replacing legacy processing
technology with a flexible, scalable architecture, the company aims to reduce
complexity and support innovation across the payments ecosystem.
According to Anne Willem DeVries, CEO and Co-founder of Silverflow, the investment signals that the market
is ready to move beyond the limitations of outdated legacy systems:
We’re the
only cloud-native company targeting this specific area, and this capital will
ensure we cement our position as the new standard in payment processing
globally. It’s not just about raising money – It’s about having the resources
to build the infrastructure that helps our customers, including acquiring
banks, payment companies and commerce platforms, to move faster and grow
bigger.
Over the past two and a half
years, Silverflow has grown from processing around around 180 transactions per day to
nearly 1.75 million daily, highlighting the rapid adoption of its platform. Its
customers include acquiring banks, payment companies, and high-growth commerce
platforms operating across Europe, North America, and Asia-Pacific.
The new
funding will support global expansion, product development, and team growth.
Silverflow plans to increase its workforce by more than 50 per cent to around 120
employees, while strengthening its presence in North America and Southeast
Asia.
The company also plans to expand support for additional card networks,
enhance its developer tools, and broaden its capabilities for in-store card payments.
UK government commits £40M to discover AI “breakthroughs” in new AI lab
The UK government has committed up to £40m to discover the UK’s AI “breakthroughs” of tomorrow, as it looks to rev up its sovereign AI credentials.
A UK government-backed lab will support the effort, backed by up to £40m to invest in “blue sky AI research".
The funding will be made available over six years for the Fundamental AI Research Lab, along with access to AI compute capacity worth tens of millions of pounds, the government said.
The UK government said it is looking to unlock breakthrough tech across healthcare, transport, science and everyday tech.
The UK government is calling on the UK’s AI experts to bring their “boldest” and “ambitious proposals" to the table.
Applications for funding will be assessed by a peer review panel chaired by Raia Hadsell, a researcher at Google DeepMind.
Last year, the government announced its Sovereign AI Unit, backed by nearly £500m in investment, to help build and scale AI capabilities on British shores, which is to be chaired by Balderton's James Wise.
AI minister Kanishka Narayan said: “AI is already doing things we could never have imagined just a few years ago, like helping to diagnose cancer. It can and will do even more – but if we want this technology to be a force for good, we need to make sure the next big AI breakthroughs are made in Britain.
“This is a long-term investment in the brilliant minds who will keep the UK in the AI fast lane. If we are the ones breaking new ground on what AI can do, we can make sure our values are baked in from the outset. This is a critical part of our mission to make AI work for everyone.”
Image: Nano Banana Pro
Shellworks raises $15M to scale sustainable plastic alternative Vivomer
London-based
biomaterials company Shellworks has raised $15 million in a Series A funding
round led by Paris-based impact investment fund alter equity. The round also
included participation from Nat Friedman (NFDG) and JamJar, founded by the
creators of Innocent Drinks, alongside existing investors Founder Collective,
LocalGlobe and Third Sphere.
Founded
in 2019, Shellworks develops and manufactures Vivomer, a bio-based material
designed as a sustainable alternative to conventional plastics. Its technology
aims to deliver environmentally friendly packaging that remains
cost-competitive and functional at scale, enabling brands to transition away
from traditional plastics.
The
funding comes as Shellworks reaches a milestone in cost competitiveness,
demonstrating that its material can match the cost of conventional materials
such as aluminium and glass despite operating at a smaller production scale of
around five million units.
The development addresses a key barrier to wider
adoption and positions the company to support brands seeking alternatives to
petroleum-based packaging.
Insiya Jafferjee, CEO and co-founder of Shellworks, said sustainable materials have
long been viewed as too costly for widespread adoption.
We're
proving that's no longer true. At just a fraction of plastic's scale, we're
already cost-competitive with alternatives like glass and aluminum. As we scale
further, we'll only get more competitive.
Vivomer
is produced by fermenting second-generation feedstocks, such as used cooking oil, with microbes and is designed to function like conventional plastic during use
while biodegrading after disposal.
The
new capital will support Shellworks’ expansion into the United States and the
European Union, with a focus on the growing wellness sector.
As
part of this strategy, the company plans to establish regional production
capabilities to reduce carbon footprints and strengthen supply chain
resilience, while developing a global production network focused on
technologies such as blow moulding, with facilities planned across the UK,
Europe and the US.
Techstars calls time on Turin accelerator
Techstars, the global startup accelerator and VC firm which provides funding and support for early-stage startups, is ending its accelerator programme in Turin, marking its latest exit from a European city.
Martin Olczyk, Techstars former managing director, said: “I’m closing a very special Techstars chapter as our programme in Turin comes to an end.”
Techstars closing its accelerator in Turin follows Techstars halting European accelerators in Berlin, Paris, Stockholm and Oslo.
It comes amid New York-headquartered Techstars facing funding challenges and focusing on what it says is “quality over quantity”.
Techstars ran the Turin accelerator in partnership with Fondazione Compagnia di San Paolo, the philanthropic foundation, the non-profit Fondazione CRT, and Intesa Sanpaolo Innovation Centre, which is run by Intesa Sanpaolo, a major Italian banking group.
Techstars ran its first accelerator in Turin in 2020, with 69 startups participating over the years, raising more than $200m.
Techstars' accelerator programmes typically run for three months, in which startups receive $220,000, (which was increased by $100,000 last year), along with mentorship and access to alumni founders and its corporate partners.
According to its website, Techstars is still running European accelerator programmes in London and Amsterdam, as well as several accelerators in the US, Saudi Arabia, Japan and other countries.
Andrea Palten, vice president, marketing, Techstars, said: “Over the past year, we have recommitted to being founder-first, focusing on quality over quantity, and building stronger startup communities around the world.
“As part of that work, we’ve made thoughtful decisions about where and how we operate accelerators.
“We are actively launching and relaunching programmes in communities where we see strong founders' momentum, deep alignment and the opportunities to deliver and an exceptional experience.
“We have reached the end of our six-year partnership with Fondazione Compagnia di San Paolo, la Fondazione CRT e Intesa Sanpaolo Innovation Center and concluded the Techstars Transformative Torino accelerator.
“While the official program has wrapped, Techstars and Martin Olczyk will continue to work with the 69 companies who participated.”
Reaction to the closure was mixed. One commentator on LinkedIn said it was “very bad news” for Turin, while others said the accelerator had had a positive impact on the Turin startup ecosystem. Olczyk has now left his role at Techstars.
Spain’s PLD Space raises €180M to scale satellite launch infrastructure
International space transportation company, PLD Space, has closed a €180 million Series C equity funding round led by Mitsubishi Electric Corporation.
The round included the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities, through the Centre for the Development of Technology and Innovation (CDTI) and its INNVIERTE fund, and the Spanish public funds management company COFIDES, through its FOCO investment fund, and Nazca Capital, via Nazca Aeroespacial y Defensa INNIVERTE I FCR Fund.
With over €350 million raised to date, this financing advances PLD Space’s strategic roadmap, supporting its transition to commercial operations and the scaling of its industrial and launch capabilities.
PLD Space now consolidates its position among a select group of private companies worldwide developing complete launch systems, enabling global access to space supported by a strategic network of worldwide locations.
PLD Space is preparing to transition into a commercial launch provider operating regular missions to deliver satellites and payloads.
MIURA 5 is on track for its first test flight in 2026, with commercial activity expected to exceed 30 launches per year by 2030. “This financing reinforces our technological and industrial leadership in the launcher market, enabling us to execute the next phase of our strategic roadmap with the speed and scale required to compete globally,” said Ezequiel Sánchez, PLD Space’s Executive President.
“MIURA 5 was designed to address a clear and growing capacity gap in the market, and this investment support strengthens our ability to transition into commercial operations. It accelerates the build‑out of the industrial and launch infrastructure required to deliver reliable access to space for an expanding pipeline of global customers.”
Tomonori Sato, Mitsubishi Electric’s Executive Officer, Group President, Defense & Space Systems said:
“By combining PLD Space’s launch capabilities with Mitsubishi Electric’s strengths in the satellite business, we aim to address evolving customer requirements, including those in the global market.”
PLD Space will provide Mitsubishi Electric with small satellite launch services using its MIURA 5 rocket for Japan and across the Asian region, demonstrating international market confidence and positioning PLD Space as a trusted infrastructure provider on a global scale.
The Spanish Minister of Science, Innovation and Universities, Diana Morant, has stated that “the closing of this series consolidates a strategic project with global impact born in our country, reinforcing Spain’s key position within the space economy. The Spanish Government has backed PLD Space’s growth plans, because investing in space means investing in technological sovereignty, strategic autonomy and qualified employment generation.”
The new capital drives PLD Space’s industrial scale‑up and expands its production and test capacity. Leveraging its strategic global footprint, the company is building a global launch infrastructure and cementing its position among the most advanced private launch companies worldwide. I
Ezequiel Sánchez added:
“As demand for dependable access to space continues to rise, we are reinforcing the redundancy, test cadence and flight cadence needed to sustain continuity across multiple locations.
This approach strengthens operational buffers and assurance frameworks that global operators increasingly rely on to secure their long‑term access‑to‑orbit strategies.”
Bootstrapped to €500M: the story behind Kilo's quiet rise — and its next billion-dollar bet
As consumer health shifts toward longevity, quantified wellness and personalised nutrition, one of Europe’s fastest-growing health tech companies is repositioning itself for the next wave.
Founded in 2013, Kilo Health — now rebranded simply as Kilo — rose to become the second-fastest-growing company in Europe in 2022.
After building direct-to-consumer health brands used by over 10 million people worldwide, the Lithuanian company is evolving into what CEO Žygimantas Surintas calls a “high-velocity venture studio”, co-founding startups and investing in early-stage companies across health, longevity, beauty and travel.
In 2024, the company posted consolidated revenue of €234 million and EBITDA of €11 million.
Its portfolio spans established brands including Moérie, Pulsetto, Bioma, Her Bodhi, ColonBroom, and RatePunk, alongside newer ventures Agava, Iteractive, and Go Health — with products now used by more than 10 million people across the US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, France, Spain, Italy, and beyond.
I sat down with CEO Žygimantas Surintas to find out more.
Kilo's shift to a high-velocity venture studio
According to Surintas, the rebrand from Kilo Health to Kilo signals a broader strategic shift:
"It was really about clarifying who we are. For a long time, people described Kilo Health in different ways — studio, ventures, startup studio — and we wanted one clear answer.
We did a full exercise to define where we act as an investor, as a managing partner, as a co-founder, as a financial partner, where we run operations, and where we don't. We crystallised it and landed on calling ourselves a high-velocity venture studio. We want to start and invest in companies that can develop very fast.
Our key advantage is speed — we have a strong foundation to launch businesses quickly — and extensive knowledge from years in this space."
That infrastructure is formalised through Kiloverse — Kilo's internal ecosystem, giving founders access to marketing expertise, technology tools, global partnerships, and specialists in R&D, nutrition, and research.
The company works with builders primarily in health and wellness, supporting them from the MVP stage through to scale. Investment tickets range from €50,000 to €1 million, with follow-on funding of up to €10 million. To date, Kilo has invested over €10 million in external startups and nearly twice that in its own R&D and product development.
The value of market specificity
Kilo operates across health, wellness, beauty, and travel. Surintas contends that they're different markets, but they also share a lot: they target the mid-market and often serve more mature customers.
“That means we have data and understanding around what these people want — their needs, interests, and problems we can solve. So we’re not going broad.
If we launch a beauty product, we’re very specific about the market — and it often overlaps with what we know from supplements. Same with travel. We exchange a lot of data internally and we’re clear on where we’re going.”
Venture strategy: the right fit over the obvious winner
From a venture perspective, Kilo isn't chasing segment leaders.
"We're not rich enough to invest in the obvious, loved-by-everyone winners," Surintas says.
"We focus on ideas that fit our concept — and especially where money is not the only value we bring. We're not private equity. This is our own equity — our own money — so we want to know how we'll help the business grow."
If capital is the only requirement, Kilo isn't the right partner.
"There are people with cheaper money. Our money is expensive — so we need the right fit and real synergies."
He's equally pragmatic about defensibility. In Kilo's core markets, what launches today gets copied tomorrow — and Surintas accepts that as inevitable. What separates the winners, he argues, is execution.
"Copy-paste doesn't win. A one-to-one copy never works because business takes soul, heart, and effort."
Europe’s opportunity — but America first
Kilo sees Europe as its biggest potential market in the coming years. But, Surintas admits, “We still have a rule: when we start something from scratch, we start in the United States first. It’s one country — one market. Europe is one system, but in practice it’s fragmented. You lose speed."
"But if you’re afraid of wolves, don’t go into the forest.”
Balancing speed, science, and data-driven decision making
When asked how Kilo balances scientific rigour and regulatory compliance with the pace of growth he describes, Surintas says it is actually one of the company’s key strengths.
“We have nutritionists, a legal team, and compliance specialists working on this every day.
If someone comes with an idea tomorrow, we can quickly say: this path works, that path doesn’t.”
While Kilo operates primarily in supplements and consumer health, the company does not manufacture its own products. Instead, it works with established partners — primarily in the United States — allowing it to develop scientifically grounded products while moving quickly.
“We know who we work with, how to create unique formulas and blends, and how to build something scalable and compliant,” Surintas says.
“That know-how saves time — and that’s where speed comes from.”
Data, he adds, is central to how the company evaluates both products and new opportunities. After more than a decade of building direct-to-consumer health businesses, Kilo has accumulated extensive internal datasets about consumer behaviour and product performance.
Looking ahead, Kilo plans to invest up to €20 million in AI development over the next three years, with an ambitious target of $1 billion in consolidated annual revenue.
With the rise of quantified health, machine learning and AI are becoming increasingly prominent in wellness products. But Surintas says Kilo is deliberately cautious about how quickly it adopts new technologies.
“We saw one company in our segment automate media buying with machine learning and let go of more than half their team — and sales dropped 40 per cent. That’s a hard lesson.”
While he acknowledges the potential of AI, Surintas believes it should be introduced gradually rather than treated as a silver bullet.
“As a leader, of course, I want AI to do everything today,” he says. “But the right approach is consistency and gradual adoption.” Why Kilo sees longevity as the next big health market In terms of what’s next in the health and wellness space, Surintas contends that diet will be a big shift:
“Trends change — keto and fasting had their moment, and keto is declining year over year. People try something, then they look for the next thing. Even GLP-1 requires specific diets to reduce side effects — so it’s all connected.”
He also sees growing demand emerging around mental health and longevity, arguing that the longevity market in particular has reached a turning point after several years of experimentation.
“People are educated enough now that we can talk about mass products — what works and what’s proven versus what’s just noise,” says Surintas.
“That’s a good moment for us. This year we’re planning to introduce four or even five longevity products.”
Kilo prefers to invest once there is early traction rather than at the pure idea stage.
“We invest when there’s real initial data and strong early development,” he explains.
“The longevity point is more than the market foundations are now in place — so it’s the right moment to build and launch.”
When it comes to navigating hype cycles versus genuine opportunity, Surintas says the company relies heavily on its own long-term dataset.
“Kilo has 12 years of data and learning in this business. That’s central to our decision-making — and as machine learning improves, the importance of data only grows.”
Bootstrapped to €500M: Kilo’s biggest win and toughest lesson
Surintas sees Kilo’s independence as its greatest achievement.
“The biggest success is that the company got here without external funding. We expect to close 2025 at around €500 million in revenue — without external investment.”
The business, he notes, was originally built by its founders from a small office and scaled organically. “Times were different then, but it’s still a major achievement. And I should stress — I joined two years ago. Others built this foundation.”
But the biggest failure is also connected to success: the company grew too fast. Surintas explains. “When turbulence came, it was difficult to control and adjust the business quickly. It took time — but it also made the company stronger. Now we’re more consistent: doing less, but with better quality.”
"We want grinders"
For founders considering the venture side, his advice is direct: take the help, and don't try to protect all the equity early.
"You can have 100 per cent of something very small, or less than 100 per cent of something very big. Don't be afraid to share your ideas — we have plenty of ideas. For us, it's not your idea we need. It's you. We want strong partners we can grind with. Read this word: grinding. We don't look for hustlers. We look for grinders."
Hustling, he contends, doesn't work anymore — especially post-COVID.
"It's tough, it takes time, and you'll spend a lot of life in the office. It's doing the work — heads down. And no AI or machine learning will change that."
Kilo’s ambitions for the next phase are both bold and pragmatic. The company aims to reach €1 billion in revenue within the next few years while maintaining strong high-digit profitability. At the same time, it plans to expand into new markets and verticals — particularly travel and longevity.
“We want consistency — not chasing the latest FOMO. We don’t have a goal to be a unicorn or whatever the new term is. We could have chased that. Our goal is a stable, strong business.”
EIF makes largest defence investment yet with €50M backing for Join Capital
The European Investment Fund (EIF), part of the EIB Group, today announced a €50 million commitment to Join Capital’s third fund as Europe moves from defence spending announcements to rebuilding industrial capability. The commitment is the EIF’s largest to date in defence and is supported by the InvestEU Defence Equity Facility, which is designed to strengthen Europe’s defence technological and industrial base by backing venture capital funds.
Join Capital’s Fund III, targeting €235 million, will invest in 25 early-stage deeptech startups across Europe developing technologies with critical capabilities in defence, dual-use, security and space.
Join Capital has backed early-stage defence and deeptech innovators across Europe, including Optics11 (Netherlands), Quadsat (Denmark), Kreios Space (Spain), Quantum Optics Jena (Germany) and 2D Photonics (Italy). These companies span fibre-optic sensing for critical infrastructure, quantum-secure communications, advanced electronic payloads, and cybersecurity.
“We back founders whose technologies create an asymmetric advantage for their customers in the military and commercial industry. Investments in such dual-use technologies have a doubling effect, they create both deterrence and economic growth for Europe,” said Jan Borgstädt, a Founding Partner at Berlin-based Join Capital.
"This investment, backed by the InvestEU fund, could not come at a better time, given the strategic importance attached to the fields of space, security and defence," said EIF Chief Executive Marjut Falkstedt.
"With this backing, we are confident that additional investments will follow, helping Europe in building a robust ecosystem for innovative defence solutions.”
“Innovation and disruptive technologies are crucial for the EU's defence readiness. By investing in specialist defence Venture capital funds, like Join Capital, the Commission and the EIF are strengthening the financial ecosystem that nurtures and supports our defence innovators, startups and SMEs to grow and scale up in Europe,” said Commissioner Andrius Kubilius.
Diligent AI raises $2.5M to support KYC and AML teams with AI agents
London-based Diligent AI,
a Y Combinator-backed startup developing autonomous AI analysts for financial
crime compliance, has raised $2.5 million in seed funding. The round was led by
Speedinvest alongside fintech investor Shapers, with participation from
strategic angel investors including the CEOs and founders of N26, Allica Bank,
IDnow, Billie and Cybersource (acquired by Visa).
KYC and AML teams play a
critical role in safeguarding the global financial system by verifying customer
legitimacy, monitoring transactions and identifying potential fraud or money
laundering. However, the expansion of sanctions regimes, rising fraud levels
and the growing velocity of digital payments have significantly increased their
operational burden.
As a result, much of the work has become repetitive and
time-intensive, with skilled professionals often focused on routine data
gathering rather than deeper investigative analysis.
Diligent AI addresses
this challenge by replacing static compliance workflows with autonomous AI
analysts designed to read, reason and investigate. Its agents automate routine
KYC and AML tasks, including reviewing SMB risk profiles, analysing adverse
media and resolving sanctions and payment screening alerts, reducing the need
for manual information gathering and contextual analysis.
Founded by Edoardo Maschio and Ahmed Gaber, Diligent AI develops AI agents that automate complex financial crime
compliance processes such as AML screening and merchant due diligence, helping
institutions reduce operational costs while improving risk detection.
Edoardo Maschio, CEO and
co-founder of Diligent AI, said the company is designing its platform
specifically for analysts:
When you strip away
repetitive tasks - like clearing false positive alerts, searching corporate
registries and public records, cross-referencing adverse media - you free up
the human mind to focus on judgment and strategy. It’s decision-making instead
of data processing. We’re not just making teams faster; we’re enabling them to
do the job they were hired to do.
The company’s agents are
already deployed across financial institutions in Europe, the Middle East, the
United States and Japan. Customers use the platform to resolve sanctions, PEP
and adverse media alerts, conduct merchant risk reviews and streamline customer
onboarding. Users report measurable operational efficiencies alongside improved
decision consistency.
Diligent AI plans to use
the new funding to expand its engineering capabilities and accelerate the
rollout of its agents across the UK and Europe as it continues to develop tools
for financial crime compliance teams.
British defence tech outfit Mutable Tactics raises over $2M in pre-seed round
A British defence tech startup developing AI software which helps improve the deployment of drones when communication is lost in combat has raised over $2m in a seed funding round.
Mutable Tactics has raised $2.1m in a funding round, led by spacetech investor Seraphim Space, with funding also from the UK’s National Security Strategic Investment Fund, Koro, Entrepreneurs First and Transpose.
Mutable Tactics is building AI software, in what it calls the “decision-layer”, that sits between the human operator and a drone, helping defence forces leverage multiple drones simultaneously.
It says its software translates a commander’s instructions into actions, meaning that mixed fleets of drones can operate together as a coordinated team, rather than as individually piloted platforms.
It says it’s solving the problem of drone deployment relying on one operator controlling one system, which limits how many drones can be used effectively at any given time.
The startup said that in battle environments, where communications are disrupted, drone systems that depend on constant human control quickly reach their limits.
Mutable Tactics was founded in 2024 by former British Army officer Colin MacLeod and robotics AI specialist Enrique Muñoz de Cote.
The startup says it will use the funding to increase the size of its engineering team in Cambridge and speed up the development of its software.
It also says the funding will be used to validate its tech in collaboration with two European governments.
MacLeod, CEO and co‑founder, Mutable Tactics, said: “Increasingly, the constraint is no longer hardware but human attention. We can deploy more drones than ever before, yet we still ask operators to control them one by one, often in environments where communications are unreliable.
"True autonomy breaks that one‑to‑one link, allowing humans to supervise and direct teams of systems rather than individual machines. That shift is essential for supporting modern military missions, where scale, speed and resilience matter, and where operators must remain focused on intent and outcomes rather than manual control.”
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