Artificial intelligence startup General Intuition has raised $320 million in a funding round led by Khosla Ventures.
General Catalyst, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos also participated in the round, which gave General Intuition a post-money valuation of $2.3 billion, the company announced on X.General Intuition describes itself as a "frontier lab for acting in space and time.” It focuses on the development of large action foundation models rather than conventional language models. The company said its AI systems are trained on billions of action-labelled gameplay clips sourced from Medal, a gaming platform with more than 17 million monthly active users.Founder and CEO Pim de Witte said in a post on LinkedIn that the company uses these precise actions from the clips to “build foundation models that can perceive environments, predict what happens next, and generate the right action in real time, across many embodiments, virtual or physical.”According to the company’s website, General Intuition aims to build AI models that go beyond texts and videos.“Truly intelligent machines must move from words to worlds, and acquire the capacity to perceive, anticipate, and improvise. They need to obtain a general intuition of reality,” the website reads.The company plans to use the funds to support continued research into large action models, expansion of computing infrastructure, and recruitment of engineering and research talent.Meanwhile, ET recently reported that Indian venture capital firms Peak XV Partners, NuVentures, DeVC and Activate are also increasingly investing in artificial intelligence startups beyond India.In 2025, Peak XV Partners invested in more than 10 US-based AI startups, including backend platform Supabase and AI analytics company PostHog, both founded by non-Indians. Activate, an AI-focused early-stage fund, has backed ElevenLabs.