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Chinese startup ShengShu raises $293 million to advance artificial general intelligence

Chinese startup ShengShu raises $293 million to advance artificial general intelligence

ReutersFri, April 10, 2026 at 1:31 AM UTC

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AI (Artificial Intelligence) letters and robot hand are placed on computer motherboard in this illustration created on June 23, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

BEIJING/SINGAPORE, April 10 (Reuters) - Chinese artificial intelligence startup ShengShu Technology has raised 2 billion yuan ($292.59 million) in a funding round ‌led by Alibaba Cloud, the company said on Friday, as ‌competition intensifies in China's AI sector.

ShengShu said the funding would support development of a "general world ​model" that processes sensory information to simulate human perception and interaction, which the company describes as a step toward artificial general intelligence in physical environments.

The company did not provide a timeline for when such a system ‌would be commercially available.

Chinese companies ⁠ranging from industry giants like ByteDance to startups such as humanoid robot specialist Unitree have begun exploring similar "world ⁠model" technologies.

ShengShu said the funding round included investments from Andon Haitang, China Internet Investment Fund, TAL Education Group, and Luminous Ventures. Existing investors LINK-X CAPITAL, ​Delta ​Capital, and Baidu Ventures also increased ​their stakes.

Founded in early 2023 ‌by Tsinghua University alum Zhu Jun, ShengShu became the first Chinese company to release a video generation model when it launched Vidu in April 2024.

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The model was positioned as a competitor to OpenAI's Sora, which the U.S. company later discontinued.

ShengShu has since released several versions of ‌Vidu, including the Vidu Q3 model announced ​earlier this year.

The company has also recently ​expanded into robotics applications. In ​December 2025, it open-sourced Motus, a model designed to ‌control robots by processing multimodal ​data including video and ​audio.

The startup faces competition from Chinese technology giants including ByteDance, Alibaba and Kuaishou, which have all launched video generation models.

Internationally, companies ​such as Google and ‌startups including Runway are also developing similar technologies.

($1 = 6.8355 Chinese ​yuan renminbi)

(Reporting by Liam Mo in Beijing and Miyoung Kim ​in Singapore; Editing by Jamie Freed)

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Source: “AOL Money”

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