- Tacta Systems has raised $75 million to develop its “Dextrous Intelligence” platform, enabling robots to perform human-level tasks with advanced tactile sensing and spatial awareness.
- The funding includes an $11 million seed round led by Matter Venture Partners and a $64 million Series A led by America’s Frontier Fund and SBVA, with participation from B Capital, EDBI, Sojitz Corporation, and others.
- Tacta’s platform aims to automate complex physical labor across industries, positioning the company at the forefront of real-world robotics innovation.
Tacta Systems, the robotics startup developing a smart nervous system for robots, has raised $75 million to advance its human-level dexterity platform.
According to the California-based company, the funding includes a previously undisclosed $11 million seed round led by Matter Venture Partners and a $64 million Series A led by America’s Frontier Fund and SBVA, with backing from Matter Venture Partners, B Capital, EDBI, Sojitz Corporation, CDIB -TEN Capital, Yazaki Innovations Inc., B5 Capital, Tyche Partners and Woven Capital.
“Enabling machines to solve complex, physical world problems is the next frontier in robotics technology,” Andreas Bibl, Co-founder and CEO of Tacta Systems, said in a statement. “AI models have become incredibly sophisticated in working with text and video, but much of the physical world remains incomprehensible to them. We’re incredibly excited about the disruptive technology that we’re developing, which will ultimately help humanity automate much of the drudgery of factory work and grueling physical labor.”
Tacta’s “Dextrous Intelligence” system combines tactile sensing, adaptive control, and spatial awareness to give robots precision grip, real-time response, and the ability to manipulate complex objects with human-like skill. The company aims to automate physical labor across industries, from manufacturing to logistics.
“Tacta is led by one of the most seasoned and accomplished Hard Tech entrepreneurs that I’ve ever seen,” noted Wen Hsieh, Founding Managing Partner at Matter Venture Partners. “The technology that they’ve developed in the last year-and-a-half is game-changing, and will prove incredibly valuable to both robotics and the world in the coming years. My firm and I are proud to have backed them from the very beginning.”