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#Weekly Funding Overview
[March.30~ April.03]#FUNDING
| Company | Inudustry | Amount | Round | Investors |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| V1C | Financial Management SaaS | 13.4 billion | Pre-Series A | Bass Ventures, DSC Investment |
| Daily Cookie | Knowledge Content | - | Seed | BonAngels Venture Partners, Strong Ventures |
| Senix Biotech | Nanomedicine | 12.5 billion | Series B | SBI Investment, Partners Investment, AJU IB Investment, CKD Venture Capital, SL Investment, InterValue Investment, Scale-up Partners |
| GMX | Next-gen Cancer Therapeutics | - | Grant | TIPS |
| Cynergy | Eco-materials Trading Platform | 25 billion | Series A | STIC Investment, Kiwoom Investment, Samchully Investment, Hyundai Motor, POSCO Capital, Astone Ventures |
| Wilcoapex | Electronic Materials | - | Series A | Doosan Investment |
| Mobilint | AI Semiconductor | 70 billion | Series C | Praxis Capital Partners, POSCO Capital, Company K Partners |
| IVWorks | Power Semiconductor Materials | 6 billion | Pre-IPO | IM Investment Partners, Enlight Ventures |
| Lapeech | Conversational AI | 1.5 billion | Capstone Scale-up Investment Union | |
| Meissa | Spatial Information AI | - | Timefolio Asset Management | |
| Warp Space | AI Character Chat Platform | 4.3 billion | Series A | ID Ventures, Kona Venture Partners, Maple Investment Partners, Paramount Investment |
| Wis Medical | Biosensor & Healthcare | 2 billion | ||
| Dot | Braille Tech Development | 4.3 billion | ||
| Eatus | Longevity Inner Beauty | - | Seed | Strong Ventures |
| MediThinQ | Medical AR Glasses | 15 billion | Series C | Partners Investment, Cornerstone Investment Partners, Moneyball Ventures |
| NCER | Diagnosis of Dementia | 1 billion | Series A | Coolidge Corner Investment, Enlight Ventures |
| Nuvilab | Food Nutrition Analysis | - | Series A | Naver D2SF |
| Soundable Health | Urine Sound Analysis AI | - | Naver D2SF | |
| Rebellions | AI Semiconductors | 640 billion | Pre-IPO | National Growth Fund, Korea Development Bank, Mirae Asset Group |
| BrainU | Anesthesia Monitoring | 3 billion | Series A | Wonik Investment Partners, IBK |
| Herbloom | Vegan Clean Beauty | - | Grand Ventures | |
| MediWhale | Medical AI | 20 billion | Series C | Premier Partners, KB Investment, IMM Investment, Quad Asset Mgmt, Hana Ventures, Aon Investment |
| Ducell Biotherapeutics | Artificial Platelet Dev. | 23.5 billion | Series C | Hanwha Inv. & Securities, Wonik Investment Partners, Hyundai Investment Partners, KDB Capital, KOSME |
| Memebox | K-Beauty | 15 billion | ASQ Fund |
#TREND ANALYSIS
Korean Defense Startups Step Into the Spotlight
The global defense industry is undergoing a rapid paradigm shift — moving away from large incumbent contractors toward a new ecosystem where startups are becoming core players. According to PitchBook data, global investment in defense tech startups has quadrupled over the past four years, with more than ten defense unicorns already emerging and the sector establishing itself as a distinct investment theme in its own right. While global capital is flowing swiftly into defense tech, South Korea’s defense investment landscape remains heavily skewed toward large conglomerates, creating a stark polarization — and this persists even as K-defense exports have surpassed $17 billion and the country’s “Big Four” defense companies continue to post record-breaking results. Innovative startups and the specialized capital that backs them remain in short supply.
To overcome this structural gap, the Korean government has begun laying the groundwork for meaningful change. The Ministry of SMEs and Startups has set an ambitious target of nurturing 100 defense startups and 30 “venture billion-dollar companies” by 2030, pursuing a dedicated defense TIPS track, large-scale R&D projects worth over ₩10 billion per project, and defense-focused funds backed by the Korea Fund of Funds. Among the most concrete initiatives is the Defense Startup Challenge, which brings together the military and prime contractors to lower the barrier for civilian technologies entering the defense sector. The Defense Acquisition Program Administration has also been running its Defense Innovation Company 100 Project since 2022, identifying and supporting innovative companies on an annual basis.
Alongside government action, meaningful signals are emerging from the private funding side as well. Korea Growth Finance has launched a recruitment process for managers of its second-generation Defense Technology Innovation Fund, targeting ₩310 billion in assets under management. Meanwhile, venture capital firms like BluePoint Partners have launched defense-focused community initiatives and are planning dedicated defense funds, reflecting growing conviction in the sector’s long-term potential.
Investment data from Startup Recipe shows that since last year, dual-use startups applying civilian technology to military domains have begun closing significant funding rounds across AI, drones, space, and robotics — with companies such as Ubify, Lion Robotics, Pablo Air, Seadronics, and WorkerInSpace among those gaining traction. More companies are expected to enter the defense ecosystem going forward, but compared to global markets, Korea’s defense startup investment still represents a modest share of total venture activity. For Korean defense to sustain its global competitiveness, a sustained influx of private capital paired with long-term policy commitment is not just beneficial — it is essential.
#MORE NEWS
- K-Beauty Platform Memebox Raises $10M from ASQ Fund
- Rebellions Closes $400 Million Pre-IPO
- South Korea Launches Unified AI Policy Brand AI+ for All