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Manycore, the first of the Hangzhou ‘Little Dragons’ to go public, pushes ‘spatial intelligence’ as the next wave of AI development

Source: FortuneView Original
businessApril 17, 2026

Hong Kong’s AI IPO boom produces its latest entrant today, as design AI startup Manycore Tech begins trading after seeking up to 1.02 billion Hong Kong dollars ($130 million) in funding, becoming the first of China’s six celebrated “Little Dragons” from Hangzhou to reach public markets.

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“The IPO is important for us to attract the most talented engineers to join us, to buy more GPUs, and to collect more data,” Victor Huang, Manycore’s chair and one of its cofounders, told Fortune ahead of the trading debut.

Manycore shares closed at 18.60 Hong Kong dollars ($2.38), 144% above the offer price of 7.62 Hong Kong dollars.

The Hangzhou-based startup is a bet on “spatial intelligence,” moving beyond the word- and language-based work of large language models like OpenAI’s GPT and DeepSeek’s V3 to instead create AI models that can autonomously work in the real world.

These programs, also called “world models,” are key to operations like robotics and autonomous driving, where machinery has to react to external stimuli, like how a robotaxi needs to slow down in response to changing traffic conditions.

Huang described spatial intelligence as similar to a person or animal’s innate ability to understand the world around them. “When you enter a room, you can understand where you are and what’s in front of you. And if you want to take a seat, you can understand which seat is empty,” he explained.

“People are now trying to apply AI in the physical dimension,” Jixun Foo, senior managing partner at the Singapore-based venture capital firm Granite Asia, and an early backer of Manycore, said. He pointed out that viral videos of humanoid robots dancing, while impressive, are often carrying out pre-programmed routines. “If you want a different performance you have to program it again. You can’t just tell the robot to do this or that action.”

Granite Asia senior managing partner Jixun Foo speaking at Fortune Brainstorm AI Singapore on July 22, 2025.Graham Uden for Fortune

Some of AI’s biggest names are also working on “world models.” Both ImageNet creator Fei-Fei Li and former Meta chief scientist Yann LeCun see these models as the next step in AI development.

LeCun has argued that video data can help train world models, but Manycore and Huang instead think the startup’s vast repository of 3D assets will be a more useful data set. “I don’t believe that if you have enough video, you can train the rules of the physical world,” Huang said.

Instead, “we’d accumulated a huge amount of 3D data, almost 500 million assets from the real world. We had the training data, so we believed we could make the best physical AI in the world,” he argued.

China’s AI sector has released many of its models on an open-source basis, which has helped to boost the reputation of its AI startups and won converts in the global tech sector, including in Silicon Valley. “People try Chinese AI. It’s free. It’s open-source. And when they try it, it’s great,” Huang explained. Manycore has already released several open-source models, including SpatialLM, a spatial language model that can understand and generate 3D environments, and SpatialGen.

Still, in recent weeks, some tech companies, like Alibaba and Knowledge Atlas, better known as Z.ai, have started to release models on a proprietary basis, at least in the initial stages, as monetizing AI work has proved tricky for Chinese companies.

But Foo thinks a company like Manycore can preserve its edge even if it open-sources its models. “For Manycore, it’s not just about their model, but also the data set they have built. That dataset is unique to them, right? If you have a competitive edge that you can hold on to, then you can open-source something,” Foo said.

The first of the ‘Little Dragons’ to go public

Manycore, founded in 2011, is one of the “Six Little Dragons,” an informal group of six tech and AI startups based in Hangzhou, now one of China’s leading AI hubs. Manycore is the first of the “dragons” to tap public markets; Unitree, the buzzy robotics manufacturer, will list on Shanghai’s stock exchange later this year.

The company got its start as a design software business, building Kujiale, a platform that lets users create 3D renders of interior spaces, and its international counterpart Coohom, which now serves customers in more than 200 countries. IDG Capital and Hillhouse Investment are among its previous backers.

Huang was an engineer on Nvidia’s CUDA team before returning to China to build a business around rendering. “The economy in the U.S. wasn’t doing well at the time, but in China, real estate was booming,” he recalled.

That work helped convince Foo, who spent time at HP, to back the company. “I used to use a lot of 3D software when I was designing HP printers,” Foo explained. “And I thought this was pretty cool: I was using it for mechanical products, and now they are doing it for a physical world.”

According to its IPO prospectus, Manycore generated 820 million

Manycore, the first of the Hangzhou ‘Little Dragons’ to go public, pushes ‘spatial intelligence’ as the next wave of AI development | TrendPulse