In section Startups & Technology

General Intuition secures $2.3 billion valuation for gaming-based AI

General Intuition has raised $320 million at a $2.3 billion valuation, banking on the theory that video games provide the ideal training ground for artificial intelligence. By leveraging millions of hours of human gameplay data, the startup aims to teach AI agents how to navigate both virtual environments and the physical world.

General Intuition secures $2.3 billion valuation for gaming-based AI

The company’s approach centers on the massive dataset harvested from Medal, a platform for sharing gaming clips founded by CEO Pim de Witte. Unlike competitors attempting to infer actions from video alone, General Intuition utilizes the specific action labels embedded in game files—records of every button press and command. De Witte argues this provides a clearer understanding of causality and spatial-temporal reasoning, allowing the AI to distinguish the self from its surroundings.

During live demonstrations, the company showed a quadrupedal robot navigating office hallways using the same “brain” trained on gaming data. According to the team, the bot required only eight minutes of real-world robotics data to adapt to its physical environment. Investors, led by Khosla Ventures, believe this proprietary data gives the firm a unique advantage in building generalized agents. With total disclosed funding reaching $454 million, the startup plans to scale its compute capacity and expand access to its API by the end of summer.

Beyond technical milestones, the company is positioning itself as a moral alternative to traditional Silicon Valley labs. De Witte has explicitly restricted the use of its technology for lethal autonomous weapons, citing ethical concerns. Instead, the firm is launching a platform called Nerve, designed to provide job opportunities for the gaming community in data labeling and robot teleoperation. While the transition from simulation to real-world application remains a significant technical hurdle, the company remains focused on serving as a foundational model provider for robotics and simulation industries.

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