BotCity funding aims to give RPA back to developers

BotCity funding aims to give RPA back to developers

BotCity is betting that the future of complex automation belongs to developers using code, not business users on low-code platforms.

2 min read

Brazilian startup BotCity has extended its seed round with an additional $500,000 from YCombinator, bringing its total to $3 million. The company is making a direct challenge to the low-code ethos of the robotic process automation (RPA) market, betting that for complex tasks, developers need to write actual code.

While giants like UiPath and Automation Anywhere have built multi-billion dollar businesses on accessible, often graphical, platforms for "citizen developers," BotCity argues this approach hits a wall. According to CEO Lorhan Caproni, "complex and game-changer automations can't be built by citizen developers." He explained that when processes span multiple legacy, desktop, and web systems without APIs, it becomes a job for engineers who are currently "stuck in low-code."

Coding against the low-code grain

BotCity’s pitch is an RPA stack built by developers, for developers. The platform uses computer vision to identify on-screen elements, allowing engineers to write Python code to automate tasks across any application, regardless of whether it has an API. This code-first approach is designed to give development teams the flexibility and power that low-code platforms often abstract away.

The RPA market is projected to hit $7.64 billion by 2028, and BotCity is carving out a niche by focusing on the technical user. The funding, originally led by SoftBank Latin America and Astrella, will fuel its mission to provide a developer-native alternative in a market dominated by platforms that prioritize business users. It’s a bet that the most valuable automation requires the precision of code, not just the accessibility of a drag-and-drop interface.

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