Farm-ng is a California-based agricultural robotics company that develops the Amiga, a modular, affordable, electric robotics platform designed for general-purpose farm tasks to promote sustainable practices.[1][2][3] It serves small and mid-sized farms, organic growers, research institutions, and specialty crop producers—particularly in regions like California's Salinas Valley—by addressing labor shortages, operational inefficiencies, and back-breaking manual work through versatile tools for tasks like weeding, mowing, tilling, seeding, and precision composting.[1][2][3] The platform's configurability, open-source software, intuitive controls, and swappable batteries (up to 8 hours runtime) enable customization via the Amiga Development Kit (ADK), fostering an ecosystem for developers and ag-tech innovators; by 2025, over 180 units were deployed globally, following a $10M Series A in 2023 and accolades like the 2023 Small Farm Innovation Challenge win.[2]
Farm-ng was founded in 2020 by Ethan Rublee, a seasoned roboticist with prior experience at Google, Industrial Perception, Inc., and Arraiy (acquired by Matterport), under the mentorship of Gary Bradski (now on the team).[2][3] Relocating from Silicon Valley to Watsonville, California, to raise his family, Rublee built ties with local farmers and identified key pain points like labor shortages and inefficiencies in specialty crops, inspiring him to create practical robotics blending AI with agriculture.[2][3] Early traction came from farmer collaborations, hosting events like the Farm Robotics Challenge (won by a UC Santa Cruz team for weed removal), and partnerships with universities for research and training, humanizing its farmer-first approach amid a profit-driven startup landscape.[3]
Farm-ng rides the agricultural robotics wave, targeting labor shortages, climate-driven sustainability needs, and precision farming trends in specialty crops (e.g., vineyards, bedded crops), where manual work dominates amid rising costs and worker scarcity.[1][2][4] Timing aligns with AI advancements and post-2020 funding for accessible tech, as seen in its $10M Series A and 180+ deployments by 2025, influencing ecosystems via open platforms that empower universities, startups, and OEMs.[2][3] Market forces like regenerative agriculture demands and fleet automation favor its modularity, positioning it against giants like John Deere while enabling broader adoption through partnerships; its 2025 acquisition by Bonsai Robotics amplifies this by merging hardware with advanced AI software for adverse environments, creating unified apps for mixed fleets across crops and tasks.[4]
Post-acquisition by Bonsai Robotics, Farm-ng's hardware will integrate with AI-driven software for end-to-end autonomy in spraying, harvesting, and fleet management—targeting leadership in outdoor intelligent machines via centralized data apps and hybrid platforms.[4] Trends like AI model scaling, OEM retrofits, and regenerative tech will propel growth, evolving its influence from niche specialty crops to global fleets, potentially transforming table grapes and beyond by cutting costs and boosting yields.[4] This farmer-empowering origin positions it to democratize ag robotics, tying back to its roots in solving real-world inefficiencies for sustainable food systems.[2][3]
Farm-ng has raised $10.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Farm-ng's investors include Acre Venture Partners, Big Idea Ventures, Prelude Ventures, Refactor Capital, SOSV, The Engine, Xplorer Capital.
Farm-ng has raised $10.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $10.0M Series A in January 2024.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 1, 2024 | $10.0M Series A | Acre Venture Partners, Big Idea Ventures, Prelude Ventures, Refactor Capital, SOSV, The Engine, Xplorer Capital |