Europe’s top funding rounds this week (30 March – 5 April)



A week bookended by Mistral’s $830 million debt raise and a €1.1 million workpod pre-seed is a useful reminder of how wide the band of European ambition now runs.

The dominant theme is not a single technology but a single instinct: build the infrastructure layer first, whether that means sovereign AI compute, quantum hardware ready for a public listing, or the molecular libraries that drug discovery has been missing for decades.


Mistral AI – $830M debt financing | Paris, France

Mistral AI has raised $830 million in debt, its first debt financing since it was founded in April 2023, to fund the purchase of 13,800 Nvidia chips for a major data centre at Bruyères-le-Châtel, south of Paris, expected to come online in Q2 2026.

The financing was arranged through a consortium of seven banks including BNP Paribas, Crédit Agricole CIB, HSBC, and MUFG, and marks a strategic shift for the company, which has until now relied entirely on third-party cloud providers for its compute.

IQM Quantum Computers – €50M financing | Helsinki, Finland

IQM Quantum Computers has secured a €50 million financing package from funds and accounts managed by BlackRock, structured to lower its cost of capital ahead of a planned SPAC merger with Nasdaq-listed Real Asset Acquisition Corp that values IQM at approximately $1.8 billion.

The deal, expected to close around June 2026, would make IQM the first European quantum computing company to list on a major US stock exchange.

Midas – $50M Series A | Berlin, Germany

Midas, the Berlin-based platform that tokenises institutional investment strategies into regulatory-compliant on-chain products, has raised $50 million in a Series A led by RRE Ventures and Creandum, with notable participation from Franklin Templeton, Coinbase Ventures, and Anchorage Digital, bringing total funding to $58.75 million.

The company, which has powered more than $1.7 billion in asset issuance and holds EU regulatory approval to serve retail investors, is using the round to launch Midas Staked Liquidity, a dedicated layer designed to make instant redemptions the default for on-chain investment products.

Standing Ovation – €30M Series B | Paris, France

Standing Ovation, the Paris-based precision fermentation startup producing casein from dairy waste streams, has raised €30 million in a Series B comprising €25 million in equity, led by Bpifrance’s Ecotechnologies 2 fund and Crédit Mutuel Innovation, alongside a new cohort of investors including Danone Ventures, Angelor, and Newtree, plus €5 million in non-dilutive financing.

The capital will fund the company’s US commercial rollout in 2026, with Europe and Asia to follow from end 2027, pending regulatory approvals.

Kestra – $25M Series A | Paris, France

Kestra, the French open-source orchestration platform for data, AI, infrastructure, and business workflows, has raised $25 million in a Series A led by RTP Global, with continued participation from Alven, ISAI, and Axeleo, taking total funding to $36 million.

The company has grown enterprise revenue 25x in 18 months, executed more than two billion workflows in 2025, and now counts 30,000+ organisations worldwide as users.

Generare – €20M Series A | Paris, France

Generare, the Paris-based techbio company that screens microbial genomes for novel small molecules produced by three billion years of evolutionary pressure, has raised €20 million in a Series A co-led by Alven and Daphni, with all existing investors re-upping.

The company claims to have characterised more novel small molecules in 2025 than the rest of the drug discovery field combined, targeting the 97% of microbial chemistry that conventional drug development has never been able to access.

Qover – $12M growth round | Brussels, Belgium

Qover, the Belgian embedded insurance orchestration platform that backs Revolut, Mastercard, BMW, and Monzo, has raised $12 million in a growth capital facility from CIBC Innovation Banking, taking total funding to more than $100 million since its founding in Brussels in 2016.

The company currently protects 15 million people across 32+ countries and has set a target of 100 million users by 2030.

TerraSpark – €5M+ pre-seed | Luxembourg

TerraSpark, a Luxembourg startup co-founded by Dr Sanjay Vijendran, who previously led ESA’s Solaris space-based solar power initiative until the agency paused it in 2024, has raised more than €5 million in a pre-seed round led by Paris-based VC Daphni.

The company is taking a ground-first approach to space-based solar power, proving radio-frequency wireless power transmission on Earth before scaling to orbit.

Nexus – $4.3M seed | Brussels, Belgium

Nexus, the Brussels-founded, Y Combinator-backed AI agent deployment platform, has raised $4.3 million in a seed round led by General Catalyst, with participation from Y Combinator and several angel investors, to let non-technical business teams deploy enterprise AI agents without engineering support. Orange is among its early customers, having deployed a customer onboarding agent in four weeks using the platform.

Omniscient – $4.1M pre-seed | Paris, France

Omniscient, the Paris-based decision intelligence platform built for boards and senior executives, has raised $4.1 million in a pre-seed round led by Seedcamp, with participation from Plug and Play, MS&AD, Raise, and Bpifrance, to replace the 150+ fragmented intelligence tools that large organisations currently manage.

The platform, co-founded by two former McKinsey consultants, ingests more than 100,000 sources and synthesises them into a two-minute executive briefing; Renault is among its early clients.

Covalo – €3.5M extension | Zurich, Switzerland

Covalo, the Zurich platform connecting more than 1,500 personal care ingredient suppliers and 6,000 brands including Givaudan, Symrise, PUIG, and La Prairie, has raised a €3.5 million funding extension led by Hi inov, with HTGF and seed + speed Ventures re-investing. 

The company is evolving from a discovery marketplace into a data backbone that plugs directly into suppliers’ PIM systems and brands’ R&D workflows, positioning itself as shared infrastructure for an industry where 80% of products are expected to require reformulation by 2030.

Enkei – undisclosed pre-seed (€3M valuation) | Stockholm, Sweden

Stockholm startup Enkei has closed a pre-seed round at a €3 million valuation, with the amount raised undisclosed, to commercialise ReCeramix, an architectural surface material made from more than 90% recovered construction and ceramic waste that is already in use at Stockholm boutique hotel Ett Hem, members’ club Angel House, and Fotografiska.

Danish architect Anders Lendager, whose practice designed the UN17 Village, has joined as both investor and active collaborator on material development.

Pickmybrain – $2.1M pre-seed | Tallinn, Estonia

Pickmybrain, the Tallinn-based platform that turns professionals’ expertise into AI-powered Digital Brains, has raised $2.1 million in a pre-seed round from business angels including an early investor in drug discovery company Insilico Medicine.

The platform, which hosts more than 1,000 professionals including Rovio co-founder Peter Vesterbacka and ex-Netflix CMO Bozoma Saint John, uses AI to handle routine queries and routes high-value questions to the expert via asynchronous video.

Metafuels – €1.92M Dutch grant | Rotterdam, Netherlands

Metafuels, the Swiss aviation technology company developing synthetic sustainable aviation fuel, has been awarded €1.92 million in grant funding from the Netherlands Enterprise Agency to advance the Turbe project, its first commercial e-SAF facility at the Evos terminal in the Port of Rotterdam.

The grant covers front-end engineering and design, permitting, and commercial preparation ahead of a final investment decision targeted for mid-2026.

Audicin – $1.9M | Helsinki, Finland

Audicin, the Finnish neurowellness company using brainwave entrainment and auditory engineering to regulate the nervous system, has raised $1.9 million, including follow-on backing from Oura Health co-founders Petteri Lahtela and Virpi Tuomivaara and a grant from Business Finland’s Deep Tech Accelerator programme.

The all-female-founded company, launched in 2022, delivers audio sessions that guide users into states of focus, stress reduction, or recovery via passive background listening rather than active mindfulness exercises.

Penemue – €1.7M | Freiburg, Germany

Penemue, the Freiburg-based TrustTech startup that detects online hate speech, digital violence, and disinformation across 89 languages in real time, has raised more than €1.7 million in a new funding round, with investors not publicly disclosed.

The company’s AI monitors social media comments and direct messages for hate speech, threats, and potentially criminal communication including coded language and emojis, and works alongside public prosecutors and police as well as commercial clients.

miros – €1.1M pre-seed | Lausanne, Switzerland

miros, the Lausanne startup spun out of EPFL’s robotics lab that builds bookable, connected acoustic workpods for public and semi-public spaces, has raised €1.1 million in a pre-seed round from business angels to expand its network. The company has deployed 15 pods across Switzerland and made its first international move with a unit in Toulouse, France.

The most consequential signal of the week may not have been Mistral’s headline number but what it represents structurally: a European AI company choosing to own its compute rather than rent it, at a moment when access to Nvidia chips has become the defining constraint on who can compete at frontier scale.

That decision, funded by seven banks rather than a single sovereign wealth fund or hyperscaler, says something about how European capital markets are beginning to organise around the AI infrastructure gap.



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Recent Reviews


As I’m writing this, NVIDIA is the largest company in the world, with a market cap exceeding $4 trillion. Team Green is now the leader among the Magnificent Seven of the tech world, having surpassed them all in just a few short years.

The company has managed to reach these incredible heights with smart planning and by making the right moves for decades, the latest being the decision to sell shovels during the AI gold rush. Considering the current hardware landscape, there’s simply no reason for NVIDIA to rush a new gaming GPU generation for at least a few years. Here’s why.

Scarcity has become the new normal

Not even Nvidia is powerful enough to overcome market constraints

Global memory shortages have been a reality since late 2025, and they aren’t just affecting RAM and storage manufacturers. Rather, this impacts every company making any product that contains memory or storage—including graphics cards.

Since NVIDIA sells GPU and memory bundles to its partners, which they then solder onto PCBs and add cooling to create full-blown graphics cards, this means that NVIDIA doesn’t just have to battle other tech giants to secure a chunk of TSMC’s limited production capacity to produce its GPU chips. It also has to procure massive amounts of GPU memory, which has never been harder or more expensive to obtain.

While a company as large as NVIDIA certainly has long-term contracts that guarantee stable memory prices, those contracts aren’t going to last forever. The company has likely had to sign new ones, considering the GPU price surge that began at the beginning of 2026, with gaming graphics cards still being overpriced.

With GPU memory costing more than ever, NVIDIA has little reason to rush a new gaming GPU generation, because its gaming earnings are just a drop in the bucket compared to its total earnings.

NVIDIA is an AI company now

Gaming GPUs are taking a back seat

A graph showing NVIDIA revenue breakdown in the last few years. Credit: appeconomyinsights.com

NVIDIA’s gaming division had been its golden goose for decades, but come 2022, the company’s data center and AI division’s revenue started to balloon dramatically. By the beginning of fiscal year 2023, data center and AI revenue had surpassed that of the gaming division.

In fiscal year 2026 (which began on July 1, 2025, and ends on June 30, 2026), NVIDIA’s gaming revenue has contributed less than 8% of the company’s total earnings so far. On the other hand, the data center division has made almost 90% of NVIDIA’s total revenue in fiscal year 2026. What I’m trying to say is that NVIDIA is no longer a gaming company—it’s all about AI now.

Considering that we’re in the middle of the biggest memory shortage in history, and that its AI GPUs rake in almost ten times the revenue of gaming GPUs, there’s little reason for NVIDIA to funnel exorbitantly priced memory toward gaming GPUs. It’s much more profitable to put every memory chip they can get their hands on into AI GPU racks and continue receiving mountains of cash by selling them to AI behemoths.

The RTX 50 Super GPUs might never get released

A sign of times to come

NVIDIA’s RTX 50 Super series was supposed to increase memory capacity of its most popular gaming GPUs. The 16GB RTX 5080 was to be superseded by a 24GB RTX 5080 Super; the same fate would await the 16GB RTX 5070 Ti, while the 18GB RTX 5070 Super was to replace its 12GB non-Super sibling. But according to recent reports, NVIDIA has put it on ice.

The RTX 50 Super launch had been slated for this year’s CES in January, but after missing the show, it now looks like NVIDIA has delayed the lineup indefinitely. According to a recent report, NVIDIA doesn’t plan to launch a single new gaming GPU in 2026. Worse still, the RTX 60 series, which had been expected to debut sometime in 2027, has also been delayed.

A report by The Information (via Tom’s Hardware) states that NVIDIA had finalized the design and specs of its RTX 50 Super refresh, but the RAM-pocalypse threw a wrench into the works, forcing the company to “deprioritize RTX 50 Super production.” In other words, it’s exactly what I said a few paragraphs ago: selling enterprise GPU racks to AI companies is far more lucrative than selling comparatively cheaper GPUs to gamers, especially now that memory prices have been skyrocketing.

Before putting the RTX 50 series on ice, NVIDIA had already slashed its gaming GPU supply by about a fifth and started prioritizing models with less VRAM, like the 8GB versions of the RTX 5060 and RTX 5060 Ti, so this news isn’t that surprising.

So when can we expect RTX 60 GPUs?

Late 2028-ish?

A GPU with a pile of money around it. Credit: Lucas Gouveia / How-To Geek

The good news is that the RTX 60 series is definitely in the pipeline, and we will see it sooner or later. The bad news is that its release date is up in the air, and it’s best not to even think about pricing. The word on the street around CES 2026 was that NVIDIA would release the RTX 60 series in mid-2027, give or take a few months. But as of this writing, it’s increasingly likely we won’t see RTX 60 GPUs until 2028.

If you’ve been following the discussion around memory shortages, this won’t be surprising. In late 2025, the prognosis was that we wouldn’t see the end of the RAM-pocalypse until 2027, maybe 2028. But a recent statement by SK Hynix chairman (the company is one of the world’s three largest memory manufacturers) warns that the global memory shortage may last well into 2030.

If that turns out to be true, and if the global AI data center boom doesn’t slow down in the next few years, I wouldn’t be surprised if NVIDIA delays the RTX 60 GPUs as long as possible. There’s a good chance we won’t see them until the second half of 2028, and I wouldn’t be surprised if they miss that window as well if memory supply doesn’t recover by then. Data center GPUs are simply too profitable for NVIDIA to reserve a meaningful portion of memory for gaming graphics cards as long as shortages persist.


At least current-gen gaming GPUs are still a great option for any PC gamer

If there is a silver lining here, it is that current-gen gaming GPUs (NVIDIA RTX 50 and AMD Radeon RX 90) are still more than powerful enough for any current AAA title. Considering that Sony is reportedly delaying the PlayStation 6 and that global PC shipments are projected to see a sharp, double-digit decline in 2026, game developers have little incentive to push requirements beyond what current hardware can handle.

DLSS 5, on the other hand, may be the future of gaming, but no one likes it, and it will take a few years (and likely the arrival of the RTX 60 lineup) for it to mature and become usable on anything that’s not a heckin’ RTX 5090.

If you’re open to buying used GPUs, even last-gen gaming graphics cards offer tons of performance and are able to rein in any AAA game you throw at them. While we likely won’t get a new gaming GPU from NVIDIA for at least a few years, at least the ones we’ve got are great today and will continue to chew through any game for the foreseeable future.



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