Who Was First? Two Embodied AI Unicorns Clash Over a 20 Billion Yuan Valuation

Edited by Yara From Gasgoo

Gasgoo Munich- June 29 brought a dramatic twist to the embodied intelligence race. Two Greater Bay Area firms—X Square Robot and AI² Robotics—announced fresh funding rounds on the same day, each pushing their valuations past the 20 billion yuan threshold.

Adding to the tension, both companies declared themselves the "first" embodied intelligence firm in the Greater Bay Area to breach the 20 billion yuan valuation mark.

The problem, of course, is that there can only be one "first."

This clash of claims serves as a microcosm of the broader embodied intelligence landscape—reflecting the capital ambitions, industry anxiety, and fierce battle for narrative dominance playing out across the sector.

AI² Robotics and X Square Both Top 20 Billion Yuan Valuation

On June 29, AI² Robotics announced it had recently closed a new financing round. The round raised nearly 5 billion yuan, lifting its post-money valuation to over 20 billion yuan and making it—by its own account—the first embodied intelligence company in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area to cross that line.

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Image Source: AI² Robotics

AI² Robotics's investor roster spans the entire capital spectrum—from state funds and ministries to regional players, insurers, brokerages, and corporate giants. Key backers include the National Small and Medium Enterprises Development Fund, China Cultural Industry Investment Fund, and the Guangdong AI Fund. The list also features Shenzhen Capital Group, Nanshan Strategic Emerging Industry Investment, and various Greater Bay Area funds, alongside strategic corporates like Sino Biopharmaceutical, Pharmaron, and Moutai Group. Financial heavyweights such as China Merchants Capital, Wuzhou Spring, CICC Capital, CSC, Liang Capital, XVC, and Junli Capital also participated.

This marks AI² Robotics’s second major funding round this year, following a Series B round in February that exceeded 1 billion yuan.

Founded in April 2023, AI² Robotics focuses on developing, manufacturing, and servicing productivity-oriented general-purpose robots. Since its inception, the firm has adhered to an end-to-end large model paradigm. It independently developed Alpha Brain, the first domain-wide, full-body embodied large model, and designed its AlphaBot robot series around this core technology.

The AlphaBot series has already been deployed at scale across several sectors, tackling high-end scenarios in automotive, biotechnology, and semiconductor panel display—serving clients like HKC—to perform tasks such as sorting, transport, and labeling.

In new retail, the company’s modular embodied intelligence service space, the "Zhi Magic Cube," launched in late 2025, is already in routine operation in cities like Beijing and Shenzhen. AI² Robotics plans to roll out 1,000 units over the next three years, carving out a new growth curve beyond industrial applications.

Almost simultaneously, X Square Robot announced it had recently closed four consecutive major funding rounds. With a valuation now exceeding 20 billion yuan, it too claimed the title of the Greater Bay Area’s first embodied intelligence unicorn to reach that milestone.

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Image Source: X Square

This round brought together top-tier capital from diverse sectors. Confirmed investors include China Mobile, the National AI Industry Investment Fund, Sequoia China, IDG Capital, Source Code Capital, Fortune Capital, and CICC Capital. The roster also features strategic players like 58 Group, Shenyang Auto, Chery Automobile, and Honor, representing over 30 leading institutions, internet giants, corporate investors, and state funds.

Notably, X Square stands out as the only domestic embodied intelligence firm to secure lead investments from all four of China’s internet giants—Meituan, Alibaba, ByteDance, and Xiaomi—with several increasing their stakes over time. Xiaomi’s strategic investment arm, for instance, participated in three consecutive rounds.

Since its founding, X Square has focused on developing foundation models native to the physical world. By building AI-native, integrated software-and-hardware solutions, it aims to serve practical commercial and residential scenarios. The company is also among the earliest in China to adopt a purely end-to-end approach to realizing general-purpose embodied intelligence models.

For Wang Qian, founder and CEO of X Square, the next phase of competition in embodied intelligence will essentially be a battle over foundation models built on data closed-loops and the capacity for model evolution.

To that end, X Square has not only developed general embodied intelligence models like WALL-A and WALL-B, but also hardware platforms—Quantum No. 1 and Quantum No. 2—that run these models. It has also engineered a suite of data collection tools, including master-slave teleoperation systems, exoskeletons, and body-less devices. A model-driven data pipeline automates large-scale collection, cleaning, labeling, and quality control.

WALL-B, officially released in April, integrates vision, language, motion, and physical prediction into a single network. Trained jointly from scratch, this architecture effectively eliminates the boundaries and information loss typical of modular systems.

X Square is actively pushing into the home sector. It previously partnered with 58.com to deploy robots powered by its WALL-AS model in real households. On April 21, the company expanded this initiative with a new program featuring robots equipped with the latest WALL-B model. These units are now entering homes, kicking off what the company calls an "internship period" for embodied intelligence in daily life.

Separately, X Square formed a joint venture with Holike called Guangdong Zhimi Liangbian Robotics. Leveraging Holike’s access to nearly 100,000 home renovation customers annually and its nationwide channel network—combined with proprietary connection technology and a full-chain ecosystem—the venture aims to build a closed-loop home solution integrating "high-end customization with AI intelligent robots."

The dual 20 billion yuan valuations signal strong confidence from capital markets regarding the future of embodied intelligence. They also highlight the industrial clustering and ecosystem advantages of the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area in the artificial intelligence sector.

Why the Fight for "First"?

The most immediate driver is undoubtedly to maximize the market impact of the new funding.

While technology and business models are still maturing, claiming the conceptual high ground equates to claiming resources. Securing the "first" or "number one" label provides an edge in the next fundraising round, as well as in securing government support and customer partnerships.

This isn’t just about bragging rights; it is a matter of survival resources.

On a deeper level, this collision acts like a prism, revealing several underlying characteristics of the current embodied intelligence industry.

First, valuation inflation is here.

The threshold for top-tier startups has jumped from 10 billion yuan early this year to 20 billion yuan by mid-year—a doubling in valuation in less than six months. Yet actual revenue? Negligible. Most embodied intelligence companies are still burning cash to acquire data.

A single round raising nearly 5 billion yuan exceeds the annual profit of many listed companies. When capital outpaces viable use cases, valuations risk becoming a game of musical chairs.

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Image Source: X Square

Second, the marketing war has begun before technical barriers have been solidified.

This is a red flag. The battle for "first" is essentially a blitzkrieg for industry narrative control. Whoever captures the high ground of public opinion can trigger a Matthew effect, squeezing out rivals.

After all, when every player is pushing embodied models and talent is drawn from the same pool of top universities and tech giants, it is hard to claim an absolute technological moat.

Consequently, the battlefield has shifted upward: whoever makes the most noise attracts the most resources and talent.

Third, a "dual-leader" pattern has unexpectedly emerged in the Greater Bay Area.

The PR clash resulted in the Greater Bay Area simultaneously boasting two 20 billion yuan embodied intelligence companies. This marks the rise of a third pole to rival Beijing’s "Tsinghua network" and the Yangtze River Delta’s "SJTU/Zhejiang University network." For the regional industrial ecosystem, this is undoubtedly a significant positive.

While the twin stars of the Greater Bay Area shine brightly, the ultimate challenge for all players is moving from "neck-and-neck" competition to "benign co-opetition"—converting capital heat into industrial depth.

Conclusion

When the noise fades, both AI² Robotics and X Square will face a fundamental question: how to turn a 20 billion yuan valuation into 20 billion yuan in revenue.

High R&D costs, complex scenario adaptation, core component cost control, and quality consistency in mass production are all Swords of Damocles hanging over their heads.

Bridging the gap from the lab to the factory floor, and from showroom demos to stable 24/7 operation, is a "last mile" challenge far tougher than raising capital.

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