Tokyo-based Sakana AI has just closed a massive 20 billion yen ($135 million) Series B funding round, but it’s not to join the brute-force race of building ever-larger foundation models. Instead, the company is making a contrarian bet: that the future of AI will be defined by efficiency and evolution, not just raw computational power.
The funding brings in heavy-hitters like Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG), Khosla Ventures, and Macquarie Capital, alongside a notable investment from In-Q-Tel (IQT), the venture capital arm that serves US intelligence agencies. This isn’t just another cash infusion; it’s a validation of Sakana’s philosophy that genuine innovation comes from constraints.
While Silicon Valley giants are locked in a seemingly unsustainable arms race, burning through capital and energy to train models on the assumption of “near limitless resources,” as Sakana puts it, the Tokyo startup is taking a different path. “We believe that intelligent life has arisen not from an abundance of resources but rather from the lack of it,” the company stated in its announcement. “Nature ultimately selects systems that are able to do more with less.”
