Modl.ai
Modl.ai is a technology company.
Financial History
Modl.ai has raised $8.0M across 1 funding round.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much funding has Modl.ai raised?
Modl.ai has raised $8.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Modl.ai is a technology company.
Modl.ai has raised $8.0M across 1 funding round.
Modl.ai has raised $8.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Modl.ai has raised $8.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Modl.ai's investors include Griffin Gaming Partners, RRE Ventures, Sinai Ventures, Vine Ventures LP, Y Combinator, Colin Carrier, Marissa Mayer.
Modl.ai is a Copenhagen-based technology company founded in 2018 that builds an AI-driven behavioral engine using virtual player bots to automate quality assurance (QA), simulate player behavior, and balance gameplay in video games.[1][2][3][4] It serves game development studios by solving key pain points in the development lifecycle, such as manual testing inefficiencies, bug detection, performance issues, and multiplayer availability, reducing testing time and costs through scalable, on-demand AI agents that mimic real players at various skill levels.[1][2][5] The company has raised over $10M in funding, grown to around 36 employees, and earned recognition like CB Insights' list of 100 most promising AI companies in 2021, with products like modl:test enabling integrationless testing on Android and desktop (iOS and consoles expanding).[1][3][4][5]
Modl.ai was founded in 2018 in Copenhagen, Denmark, by a team including CEO Christoffer Holmgård, who brought expertise from research and machine learning for games, including a doctorate and professorship in the field.[3][4][7] Holmgård teamed up with other co-founders—game developers, engineers, and AI experts—to address repetitive, time-intensive tasks in game development, starting with virtual player bots for automated QA and evolving into a full behavioral AI engine.[3][7] Early traction came from focusing on efficient, on-the-fly learning bots that require no extensive training, allowing smaller-scale operations compared to massive AI models; pivotal moments include partnerships like with Riot Games for human-like bots in tactical shooters and listings on global AI watchlists.[3][6][7]
Modl.ai rides the wave of AI automation in gaming, where development cycles are lengthening amid rising complexity and player expectations for bug-free, balanced experiences—exacerbated by labor shortages in QA.[5][7][8] Timing aligns with generative AI's maturity enabling behavioral simulation without massive compute, addressing a $100B+ industry bottleneck where manual testing consumes 20-50% of budgets.[1][7] Market forces like mobile/console growth and live-service games favor it, as bots scale testing for updates and multiplayer; it influences the ecosystem by freeing developers for creativity, boosting titles from indies to AAA (e.g., Riot integration), and setting standards for efficient AI in non-training-heavy niches.[3][6][8]
Modl.ai is poised to expand its behavioral AI engine to full console/PC support, fast-paced genres, and broader NPC/multiplayer applications, capitalizing on AI agent trends and partnerships with majors like Riot.[5][6] Trends like CI/CD automation and real-time player data will shape its path, potentially capturing a slice of the growing game dev tools market as studios prioritize speed-to-market. Its influence could evolve from QA specialist to core AI infrastructure provider, humanizing game dev while scaling human-like experiences—echoing its origins in clever, efficient bots that started by simply breaking games to build better ones.[7]
Modl.ai has raised $8.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $8.0M Series A in October 2022.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oct 1, 2022 | $8.0M Series A | Griffin Gaming Partners, RRE Ventures, Sinai Ventures, Vine Ventures LP, Y Combinator, Colin Carrier, Marissa Mayer |