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Andreas Klinger 🦾

@andreasklinger70,241 subscribers

Mad-scientist investor main-questing Europe 🇪🇺 @prototype_cap 🦾 @euinc_petition 🇪🇺 🔧-prev: @producthunt @angellist @coinlist @beondeck ❤️ @susanneknoll

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Belgium please never change. Lol

Belgium please never change. Lol

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I just visited a company in Finland that can turn any transparent surface — windows, glasses, plastic, anything — into a 3D display that perfectly augments what you see behind it. Welcome to Distance . One of the most exciting companies in Europe right now. And they're only two years old. We're not talking about a tiny rectangle in the corner of your windshield. The entire glass becomes your screen. They showed this to Kia's design team. It led to a concept car with a full edge-to-edge 3D windshield that paints navigation onto the actual road, shows you what the car sees, highlights threats, and yes, could theoretically replace every Pepsi billboard with a Coke one. But the defense side is where it gets serious. As a neighbor to Russia, Finland feels the pain of Ukraine very directly. The Distance team wanted to be part of the solution. Their field operator headset gives soldiers jet fighter-grade situational awareness. Any sensor (thermal, infrared, multispectral) overlaid onto what you actually see. Tested in over a dozen field trials with the Finnish army. Driving armored vehicles in arctic conditions in the middle of the night with full 3D perception. The field operator headset effectively allows soldiers to see through smoke, and with extra cameras even behind walls. Some of what they showed us had never been shown publicly before. And there's more cooking under the hood they couldn't share yet. Two years in. Moving at the speed of light. Welcome to Europe!

Andreas Klinger 🦾

123,304 views • 15 days ago

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FR8 is a 12,000 m² palace, filled with geniuses researching or building startups, it charges 0% equity and even pays for your food, living, and flights. One of their founders drank actual poison on stage to demo their tech. Welcome to FR8. Nothing about FR8 makes sense because it’s so over the top in their ambition, but they might eventually become the biggest thing for young founders globally. And it’s happening right here in Europe. They are neither a hackerhouse, nor a startup accelerator, nor a classic research lab. Instead they think of themselves as a university-like institution for the post AGI world that pushes you towards building companies, ambition, obsession, and bias-to-action. Think YCombinator, Stanford and Bell Labs all wrapped into one thing for the most ambitious 20-somethings in the world to work, run by 20-somethings. They just came out of stealth. Until recently people didn’t even know where their latest cohort is based. Because additionally on top FR8 is absurdly secretive. Their target group knows them and that’s about all they care for. We visited last week to join them behind-the-scenes as they prepare for their first demo day in their new building - a 5 floor university building in the middle of Helsinki. We knew them for quite some time so we were allowed to film them as the first team worldwide. But even we couldn’t film multiple floors and rooms of their building. This video gives you an insight into the ambitious craziness that FR8 is – but trust me there’s more to come in the near future. The biggest new thing in startups – isn’t in SF – it’s in the north of Europe and attracts young geniuses worldwide. Welcome to FR8!

Andreas Klinger 🦾

81,788 views • 24 days ago

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It only needs a few crazy ones to fix a continent… Let's be crazy… I got something to announce: We're launching PROTOTYPE: a new fund, fully focused on Europe. A small fund that punches way above it's size. With it we back what Europe is world-class at: robotics, automation, manufacturing, and anything that requires hard engineering. First check. First round. As early as it gets. Europe invented industry. We're the birthplace of precision manufacturing. The second largest manufacturing hub on the planet. Leaders in automation and robotics. And yet… We sell out our best tech to China. We export our best founders & most of our investment money to the US. That's insanity. What should we do instead? Build the next trillion euro companies in robotics, manufacturing, automation right here: in Europe. Showcase to young founders what is possible and change the system around them where needed. What we will do: → Publish all our fund updates and build in public: → Showcase Europe’s Most Ambitious Startups on Youtube: → Launch & support more projects like EU–INC. Enough talking about Europe. Time to build it: Startups, makerspaces, student clubs, and much more. → And most importantly, invest into the best founders in Europe. Same model as our previous funds that are in their top 1-5% cohorts worldwide. We won’t do a VC fund in the classic sense. This will be a community of hyper-ambitious people who want to actively change Europe for the better. It only needs a few crazy ones to fix a continent… Let's be crazy. Check out

Andreas Klinger 🦾

392,858 views • 4 months ago

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Fundraising sucks for founders, especially if you are a first-time founder. I've raised for my own companies, invested in over 100 startups and helped 1000+ founders raising money. We had a bit of time so we decided to do a 40-minutes fundraising crash course. It’s a mix of strategic stuff, mental models, understanding investor game dynamics and tactical advice. Hopefully useful to anyone raising money right now. A few takeaways – but I explain it all in the video better: 1. You can evaluate every deal on three vectors: “credentials, innovation, execution”. You want to be strong on two of them. And being able to understand where you stand here allows you to be pro-active in driving your raise. 2. "We're not fundraising yet, but..." is the most underrated hack. Use it to test the waters. If an investor is genuinely bullish, they'll make you an offer anyway. 3. If it's not a hell yes, it's a no. VCs that want in will do anything to get in. The rest keep you in weird limbo with fake homework. 4. "Come back with more traction" is a lie. It means: we don't believe in you yet, but if the market proves us wrong, sure. But there is an easy way around this. Get the right people involved. 5. Don't pitch. Send the deck before. Have a real conversation. Your only goal: can this investor repeat what you do in a way that's exciting at drinks afterwards? 6. Don't raise for long. Three months on the market and everyone knows? You're discounted sushi. 7. Velocity beats optimisation. Almost always. The best fundraising strategy is getting investor commitments so fast that other investors have to chase you. 8. The real elevator pitch isn’t between founder and investor but between two investors. Eg. an associate trying to show off to a partner or angels trying to get new opinions on the deal. => and tons more Full video in

Andreas Klinger 🦾

78,597 views • 29 days ago

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🦾🔥 2026 will be the year of robotics. And you should start a robotic company right now! Let me explain you why and show you the opportunities in the video – but here is an outline: We're in an Will Smith spaghetti moment. Remember how AI-generated video looked horrific two years ago? That's where robotics is right now. Computer vision is solved. VLAs (vision language action models) are starting to work. The reliability problem is being cracked as we speak. And unlike software, where you're competing against 15,000 marketing AI startups, humanoids has maybe 200 companies worldwide. Warehousing, the most crowded robotics vertical, has 700. Plus what are you going to do? Build a SaaS that claude can one-shot? The macro tailwinds are also obvious: Dark factories. Self-driving everything. Drones dominating warfare. China pushing automation hard. The West needing to reindustrialize with an aging workforce. But the real unlock is that small teams can now move incredibly fast. In the video we show robots built by one person, that is a year later already shown at CES, and raised couple million euros. Components costs are also dropping. Plus production suppliers actually want to work with startups now. In the video we are also going into opportunities. One mental model is simple: robotics is the next SaaS. Look at any industry, find one specific task, and build a robot that can do it better, faster, or around the clock. But we go through multiple mental models more in the video I uploaded the full video right here on X. But if you got a second, i'd appreciate a share, like, subscribe on youtube (link below!) ⬇️

Andreas Klinger 🦾

64,769 views • 4 months ago

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A startup in Wales is manufacturing diamonds for semiconductors in space. Yep… for real. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🔥🇪🇺 To repeat this and to make this clear: Space Forge is literally building forges in space. And if their vision works – and trust me this is not hyperbole – this will literally kickstart a whole new industry for humanity: Manufacturing in Space! 🧑‍🚀 Their mission? Grow ultra-pure crystals in orbit. Each worth a fortune. Those crystals the foundation for chips of countless future technologies. Chips that power everything from 5G networks, to EVs, to future quantum systems. Ok what the hell: Why satellites? The problem: On Earth, gravity frequently ruins the crystals while growing. Eg convection introduces tiny defects into every crystal we grow. In orbit, with less effective gravity, those defects disappear. The result: dramatically more efficient, more powerful and better functioning semiconductors. Launching an actual satellite factory sounds completely insane, but exactly the kind of level of ambition we need here in Europe. 🔥 So naturally, I flew to Wales to find out how it works. We were the first to tour their new facility – and you are the first to see it! In the video we will be touring their clean rooms, see crystals grown, stand in their mission control, and learn how the two founders started this company after three pints in a pub. I am not overhyping this when i say: Space Forge is literally the spearhead of a whole new industry for humanity… This is the kind of level of WTH-ness we need here in Europe. 🙏❤️ Shoutout and thanks to Joshua, their founder, and his team for having us around! Full video on our Youtube and in the replies. Appreciate your like & RT🙏

Andreas Klinger 🦾

50,932 views • 3 months ago

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Autonomous businesses run by AI will be the big thing in 2026. Autonomous AI company builder Polsia just launched, so naturally I gave it my credit card and clicked "surprise me" to see what could possibly go wrong. It instantly went full stalker mode. Researched me, figured out I run PROTOTYPE, and decided to build an AI-native version of my own analyst team. It came up with a name, wrote a mission statement, set up an email address, and tweeted about it. Before the landing page existed. It tweeted before building the landing page. 🤯 Then it wanted to send cold outreach emails to European founders. On my behalf. Using the Gmail I'd logged in with. This is Polsia . Think of it like Claude, but instead of writing code, it builds businesses. You give it an idea (or just click "surprise me"), and it sets up everything: servers, Stripe, landing page, email, ads. Then every night an AI "CEO" wakes up, checks how the business is doing, fixes bugs, sends emails, runs Meta ads, handles support. You get a morning summary. Reply if you want to steer. Don't reply and it keeps going anyway. The founder Ben Cera calls it: "You're the creative director. Polsia is the CEO." His 91-year-old dad uses it. Gets an email every morning in French. Replies when he feels like it. That's the whole interface. Solo founder. Zero employees. 2,000+ companies on the platform. $1.8M in cash flows running through the system (and that number changed between when I started testing and when we did the interview two hours later.) Is the output perfect? No. The apps are basic. The cold outreach will annoy people. The AI-generated video ads look like what they are. But this is as bad as it will ever be. And it's already kinda working. The logical conclusion of AI coding tools was always this. First Claude writes your code. Then it takes over your desktop. Now it runs your business. Someone just had to be crazy enough to wire it all together. I go through the entire product live, panic about email permissions in real time, and then talk to Ben about the AI that's currently trying to raise its own funding round. 🦾

Andreas Klinger 🦾

33,286 views • 3 months ago