French deep-tech company VSORA has secured $46 million in fresh funding to expedite the development of its cutting-edge AI inference chip, with the goal of revolutionizing the global market for artificial intelligence processors. The funding round, spearheaded by Otium and a French family office, also saw participation from Omnes Capital, Adélie Capital, and co-financing from the European Innovation Council (EIC) Fund.
This injection of funds will drive the final stages of development and eventual manufacturing of VSORA’s flagship chip, the Jotunn8 (J8), set to hit the silicon production line in 2025. Engineered to tackle the demands of next-gen AI inference workloads, the J8 chip is positioned as an efficient and scalable alternative to GPU-based solutions, boasting lower power consumption and enhanced throughput. This move highlights Europe’s ambitions to establish its technological sovereignty in the high-performance AI chip sector, which has long been dominated by U.S. and Asian tech giants.
VSORA’s CEO and founder, Khaled Maalej, views this investment as a strategic milestone in the company’s journey. Maalej expressed enthusiasm about the funding, stating, “This funding represents a pivotal moment for VSORA as we push forward our mission to transform AI chips and secure Europe’s technological independence in AI computing. It will propel the finalization of our technology and kickstart our manufacturing, positioning VSORA as a vital player as the sole alternative for chip designers from beyond Europe.”
To ensure access to advanced manufacturing capabilities and production standards, VSORA has formed strategic partnerships with key players across the global semiconductor supply chain. These collaborations are geared towards preparing for industrialization and positioning the company as a formidable European contender in the rapidly expanding AI chip market.
According to Gaspard de Veyrac, principal at Otium, the firm recognized a unique opportunity in supporting a European venture capable of challenging industry frontrunners. De Veyrac remarked, “With top-tier engineering talent in France and Europe, VSORA presents a distinctive offering in a market dominated by global giants like Nvidia. With this funding, VSORA can secure a prominent position in the global AI chip industry and reshape the landscape of AI computation.”
The Jotunn8 chip, touted by VSORA to deliver over 3,200 teraflops of compute power, addresses critical AI inference challenges such as energy efficiency, latency, and deployment cost. VSORA asserts that its chip consumes less power and delivers superior performance compared to existing solutions, making it ideal for demanding applications like autonomous vehicles, robotics, edge AI, and data center generative AI workloads like ChatGPT.
Unlike general-purpose GPUs that often require additional software layers and hardware resources, VSORA’s chip architecture is tailored for inference workloads, giving it an advantage in latency-sensitive and power-constrained environments. This focus on inference positions VSORA to capitalize on the growing AI market segment. Industry projections indicate that AI inference is poised to surge from $124 billion in 2025 to $255 billion in 2030, driven by the widespread adoption of AI models in real-time decision-making and automation.
Established in 2015 by a team of digital signal processing (DSP) experts and AI engineers, VSORA operates from offices in France and Taiwan. The company has built a reputation for developing AI processors that prioritize both raw performance and system-level efficiency. As it enters its next growth phase, VSORA aims to ramp up production, deepen partnerships, and introduce one of Europe’s most promising alternatives to the GPU-centric status quo in AI hardware.