Tools & Platforms
Saudi Arabia taps AI and immersive tech to drive tourism growth

RIYADH: Startup investment across the Middle East and North Africa accelerated sharply in July, with total funding reaching $783 million across 57 deals.
The rise marks a 1,411 percent increase from June and more than double the amount raised in July 2024, positioning the third quarter of 2025 for robust regional growth, according to Wamda’s monthly report.
The increase was driven primarily by two megadeals, highlighting sustained investor appetite for later-stage, high-growth opportunities.
Saudi Arabia led regional funding activity, securing $396.5 million across 16 deals, while the UAE followed with $359 million raised in 22 startups.
The Kingdom’s performance was boosted by three major rounds, including Q-commerce platform Ninja’s $250 million raise led by Riyad Capital, propelling it to unicorn status, foodtech startup Calo’s $39 million series B extension, and SaaS provider Lucidya’s $30 million series B.
The funding landscape saw notable shifts among emerging ecosystems. Iraq claimed third place with a single $15 million transaction for InstaBank, moving ahead of the traditional heavyweight Egypt.
Morocco followed in fourth, propelled by Ora Technologies’ $7.5 million round.
Egypt, once consistently in the top three, dropped to fifth place, recording just $4 million in funding across seven startups. Analysts cite macroeconomic headwinds, including currency instability, as contributing factors to Egypt’s diminished share.
By sector, deeptech overtook fintech for the first time in several months, drawing $250.3 million from four deals.
E-commerce matched deeptech in total funding, also raising $250 million, driven by Ninja’s record-setting round.
Software-as-a-service startups came third, attracting $89 million across 12 deals, while fintech dropped to fourth, with $61 million raised in 11 transactions.
“The shift reflects a growing appetite for IP-heavy, innovation-led ventures and scalable consumer platforms, even as fintech funding cools,” the report stated.
Two megadeals — Ninja and XPANCEO — accounted for 56 percent of total funding in July, skewing the overall numbers toward large-scale capital deployments. Series A rounds were notably strong, raising $267 million across three startups.
Later-stage deals accounted for $158 million, while 26 early-stage companies raised a combined $36 million. Debt financing represented only 2 percent of the total, reaffirming the continued dominance of equity-based funding in the region.
Our vision is to make high-impact technology radically accessible for agents everywhere.
Fouad Bekkar, founder and CEO of Coraly.ai
The investment landscape also saw renewed interest in consumer-focused business models. Business-to-consumer startups captured $534 million in funding, reversing a trend from earlier this year when enterprise solutions and B2B ventures attracted more capital.
Business-to-business startups raised $202.4 million across 32 deals, with the remainder distributed among direct-to-consumer and hybrid models.
However, the gender gap in venture funding persisted. Startups led exclusively by male founders raised $774.5 million across 43 deals. Mixed-gender founding teams secured $5.8 million, while female-led ventures attracted just $3 million from eight deals.
Despite increased visibility of women in entrepreneurship, funding distributions remain uneven, suggesting that systemic barriers continue to limit capital access for women-led startups.
With seven months remaining in the calendar year, MENA startup funding has already surpassed the full-year total for 2024.
The momentum reflects the region’s ongoing transition from nascent to mature innovation ecosystems, with capital flows expanding beyond traditional markets into emerging hubs.
The sustained activity signals confidence from global and regional investors alike.
“With Saudi Arabia and the UAE drawing record-breaking rounds, and emerging markets like Iraq and Morocco making surprise appearances in the top rankings, investor interest is diversifying beyond traditional hubs,” the report added.
Coraly.ai raises $2m pre-seed round
A proptech company focused on streamlining lead generation and conversion for real estate professionals, Coraly.ai has raised $2 million in a pre-seed funding round.
The investment was led by Salica Oryx Fund, managed by Salica Investments and based in Abu Dhabi Global Market, with participation from EQ2 Ventures and strategic angel investors.
Founded as Coralytics and recently rebranded to Coraly.ai, the company uses artificial intelligence to simplify real estate sales workflows.
“Real estate agents globally are underserved by fragmented, outdated sales tools. Through Coraly.ai, our mission is to simplify growth with AI that just works,” said Fouad Bekkar, founder and CEO of Coraly.ai.
“This funding gives us the firepower to further accelerate product innovation and expand into key growth markets,” Bekkar added.
The capital will support the company’s product development roadmap, including engineering hires and advanced AI features.
FASTFACT
The Kingdom’s performance was boosted by three major rounds, including Q-commerce platform Ninja’s $250 million raise led by Riyad Capital, foodtech startup Calo’s $39 million series B extension, and SaaS provider Lucidya’s $30 million series B.
Coraly.ai will also consolidate its position in the UAE, establish new operations in Saudi Arabia, and launch pilot programs in France and the US.
“Salica Oryx Fund is delighted to be an early supporter and investor in Coraly.ai. It represents a significant advancement in real estate marketing technology, offering an AI-powered platform that fundamentally transforms how properties are marketed and presented online,” said Ivo Detelinov, general partner at Salica Oryx Fund.
Patrick Thiriet, CEO of EQ2 Ventures, added, “AI is about to leapfrog productivity across many industries where professionals still use ill-adapted legacy software products to run their business. The property market is one of those verticals, with real estate agents spending too much time on non-productive tasks.”
Coraly.ai’s international growth strategy is reinforced by a go-to-market partnership with SNPI, France’s largest real estate union, representing over 14,800 agencies.
In North America, the company has secured its first US-based multiple listing service partner, with pilots expected to launch shortly.
Breadfast secures $10m to expand operations
Egypt’s quick-commerce grocery delivery platform Breadfast has raised $10 million as part of its Series B2 round.
The investment was led by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, with participation from Novastar Ventures.
Founded in 2017, Breadfast has evolved from a bakery delivery service into a full-scale on-demand grocery and household goods provider. The new funding places its valuation between $382 million and $400 million.
The company will use the capital to expand fulfilment centres in Cairo, Giza, Alexandria, and Mansoura, with plans to enter additional Egyptian cities. It is also investing in Breadfast Pay, a fintech extension offering digital savings, withdrawals, and branded payment cards.
The fintech unit supports the company’s ambition to develop a broader super-app experience, integrating commerce and financial services to boost customer engagement and retention.
Impact46 invests $6.66m in five MENA gaming studios
Saudi Arabia-based venture capital firm Impact46 has invested more than SR25 million ($6.66m) in five gaming studios — Fahy, NJD Games, Game Cooks, Starvania, and Alpaka — as part of its SR150 million Gaming Fund launched in March 2024.
The studios span mobile, PC, console, and hybrid-casual gaming, reflecting the growing creative and technical capabilities of the MENA region’s gaming ecosystem.
“We see gaming as more than a sector; it’s a language of youth, culture, and creation,” said Basmah Al-Sinaidi, managing partner at Impact46.
“Through these investments, we’re backing builders who aren’t just launching games but creating the infrastructure, stories, and platforms that define the next era of content in the region.”
Fahy and NJD Games are focused on mobile titles developed in Saudi Arabia. Game Cooks, now headquartered in Riyadh, has produced over 22 titles across VR, PC, and mobile platforms and has won multiple international awards.
Starvania specialises in fantasy PC and console games, while Alpaka develops hybrid-casual mobile games in the action genre.
These investments follow earlier backing of Spoilz, which develops culturally inspired mobile games, and Spekter Games, a publisher building games for chat-based platforms with Web3 layers.
Together, the portfolio illustrates Impact46’s commitment to fostering a homegrown gaming ecosystem.
The initiative aligns with Vision 2030 and Saudi Arabia’s National Gaming and Esports Strategy, which aims to position the Kingdom as a global gaming leader.
Key enablers include the Saudi Esports Federation, CODE, and the Esports World Cup Foundation.
Perle raises $9m seed round
UAE-based startup Perle, which is building a decentralized AI training data platform, has closed a $9 million seed funding round led by Framework Ventures.
The funding will support the launch of Perle Labs, a crypto-native ecosystem aimed at enhancing how humans contribute to AI model training.
Perle uses blockchain infrastructure to provide transparent payments, on-chain attribution, and verifiable work histories for contributors.
“As AI models grow more sophisticated, their success hinges on how well they handle the long tail of data inputs — those rare, ambiguous, or context-specific scenarios,” said Ahmed Rashad, CEO of Perle.
“By decentralizing this process, we can unlock global participation, reduce bias, and dramatically improve model performance.”
The company’s platform supports the full AI development lifecycle, including multimodal data collection, reinforcement learning from human feedback, and assistant fine-tuning.
It combines human expertise with adaptive workflows to accelerate the accuracy and scale of training data.
Perle is targeting developers and companies seeking more robust, transparent, and scalable AI data pipelines, with a long-term vision to decentralize the AI supply chain and empower global contributors.
Tools & Platforms
Anthropic’s Claude restrictions put overseas AI tools backed by China in limbo

An abrupt decision by American artificial intelligence firm Anthropic to restrict service to Chinese-owned entities anywhere in the world has cast uncertainty over some Claude-dependent overseas tools backed by China’s tech giants.
After Anthropic’s notice on Friday that it would upgrade access restrictions to entities “more than 50 per cent owned … by companies headquartered in unsupported regions” such as China, regardless of where they are, Chinese users have fretted over whether they could still access the San Francisco-based firm’s industry-leading AI models.
While it remains unknown how many entities could be affected and how the restrictions would be implemented, anxiety has started to spread among some users.
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Singapore-based Trae, an AI-powered code editor launched by Chinese tech giant ByteDance for overseas users, is a known user of OpenAI’s GPT and Anthropic’s Claude models. A number of users of Trae have raised the issue of refunds to Trae staff on developer platforms over concerns that their access to Claude would no longer be available.
Dario Amodei, CEO and cofounder of Anthropic, speaks at the International Network of AI Safety Institutes in San Francisco, November 20, 2024. Photo: AP alt=Dario Amodei, CEO and cofounder of Anthropic, speaks at the International Network of AI Safety Institutes in San Francisco, November 20, 2024. Photo: AP>
A Trae manager responded by saying that Claude was still available, urging users not to consider refunds “for the time being”. The company had just announced a premium “Max Mode” on September 2, which boasted access to significantly more powerful coding abilities “fully supported” by Anthropic’s Claude models.
Other Chinese tech giants offer Claude on their coding agents marketed to international users, including Alibaba Group Holding’s Qoder and Tencent Holdings’ CodeBuddy, which is still being beta tested. Alibaba owns the South China Morning Post.
ByteDance and Trae did not respond to requests for comment.
Amid the confusion, some Chinese AI companies have taken the opportunity to woo disgruntled users. Start-up Z.ai, formerly known as Zhipu AI, said in a statement on Friday that it was offering special offers to Claude application programming interface users to move over to its models.
Anthropic’s decision to restrict access to China-owned entities is the latest evidence of an increasingly divided AI landscape.
In China, AI applications and tools for the domestic market are almost exclusively based on local models, as the government has not approved any foreign large language model for Chinese users.
Anthropic faced pressure to take action as a number of Chinese companies have established subsidiaries in Singapore to access US technology, according to a report by The Financial Times on Friday.
Anthropic’s flagship Claude AI models are best known for their strong coding capabilities. The company’s CEO Dario Amodei has repeatedly called for stronger controls on exports of advanced US semiconductor technology to China.
Anthropic completed a US$13 billion funding round in the past week that tripled its valuation to US$183 billion. On Wednesday, the company said its software development tool Claude Code, launched in May, was generating more than US$500 million in run-rate revenue, with usage increasing more than tenfold in three months.
The firm’s latest Claude Opus 4.1 coding model achieved an industry-leading score of 74.5 per cent on SWE-bench Verified – a human-validated subset of the large language model benchmark, SWE-bench, that is supposed to more reliably evaluate AI models’ capabilities.
This article originally appeared in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the most authoritative voice reporting on China and Asia for more than a century. For more SCMP stories, please explore the SCMP app or visit the SCMP’s Facebook and Twitter pages. Copyright © 2025 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 2025. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.
Tools & Platforms
‘Please join the Tesla silicon team if you want to…’: Elon Musk offers job as he announces ‘epic’ AI chip

Elon Musk has announced a major step forward for Tesla‘s chip development, confirming a ‘great design review’ for the company’s AI5 chip. The CEO made the announcement on X, signaling Tesla’s intensified push into custom semiconductors amid a fierce global competition, and also offered job to engineers at Tesla’s silicon team.According to Musk, the AI5 chip is set to be ‘epic,’ and the upcoming AI6 has a ‘shot at being the best by AI chip by far.’“Just had a great design review today with the Tesla AI5 chip design team! This is going to be an epic chip. And AI6 to follow has a shot at being the best by AI chip by far,” Musk said in a post on X.Musk revealed that Tesla’s silicon strategy has been streamlined. The company is moving from developing two separate chip architectures to focusing all of its talent on just one. “Switching from doing 2 chip architectures to 1 means all our silicon talent is focused on making 1 incredible chip. No-brainer in retrospect,” he wrote.
Job at Tesla chipmaking team
In a call for new talent, Musk invited engineers to join the Tesla silicon team, emphasising the critical nature of their work. He noted that they would be working on chips that “save lives” where “milliseconds matter.”Earlier this year, Tesla signed a major chip supply agreement with Samsung Electronics, reportedly valued at $16.5 billion. The deal is set to run through the end of 2033.Musk confirmed the partnership, stating that Samsung has agreed to allow “full customisation of Tesla-designed chips.” He also revealed that Samsung’s newest fabrication plant in Texas will be dedicated to producing Tesla’s next-generation A16 chipset.This contract is a significant win for Samsung, which has reportedly been facing financial struggles and stiff competition in the chip manufacturing market.
Tools & Platforms
“Our technology enables the creation of the digital leaders of the future”

“Our cloud enables us to create the leaders of the future,” said Kevin Cochrane, Chief Marketing Officer at Vultr, at the Calcalist AI Conference in collaboration with Vultr.
Vultr provides companies with cloud infrastructure that gives them access to the computing power needed for artificial intelligence, including Nvidia graphics processors (GPUs) – the most sought-after processors in the world for training and running AI models. These processors are expensive and in short supply, making them difficult for startups, particularly early-stage companies, to acquire. Vultr’s platform allows companies to use these processors without purchasing them outright.
“We have a commitment to the entire ecosystem,” said Cochrane. “We launched our platform for developers so they can work locally but reach the whole world. We enable the creation of digital leaders, the building of a new future, and an AI infrastructure that is unparalleled, giving companies a significant advantage. Enterprises are adopting AI at a remarkable pace. All Fortune 500 companies are emphasizing AI implementation. Our research shows a huge demand for AI applications at scale. Any entrepreneur can launch new initiatives, and we provide cloud infrastructure with full support for an open ecosystem without restrictions.”
Cochrane added, “New AI models will be central to the future world, and we are here to help build it. Our cloud can manage all needs locally in Tel Aviv while distributing globally. It must be simple, accessible to every developer, and affordable for startups so that resources can go to innovation. We believe in flexible freedom of choice for selecting your ecosystem.”
“Today, all AI processors are dominated by Snowflake,” he said. “The world must be open to every developer. We offer a pricing structure that won’t break the bank, allowing money to go into building new solutions. Our prices are significantly lower than any other hyperscale cloud. As a global NVIDIA partner, we provide flexibility in choosing the GPU that best suits your performance needs.”
“A free and open ecosystem is essential,” concluded Cochrane. “We are here to make that possible. Through us, developers can experiment and find what works best for them. The journey is just beginning.”
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