AppWorks has just completed its fourth fundraise of $165 million, bringing the total fundraising scale to $386 million. While this number itself isn’t particularly large, the underlying changes are worth noting: sovereign funds are participating in Asian venture capital on a large scale for the first time, and this institution is redefining its role in the AI and Web3 era.
The Ecological Story Behind the Fundraising Scale
Since its founding in 2009, AppWorks has built an ecosystem comprising over 2,000 founders and 653 active startups. The Fund IV raise attracted the first joint participation of three major pan-Asian sovereign funds — Taiwan’s National Development Fund, Malaysia’s Jelawang Capital, and Korea’s KVIC. This is not just simple financing; it represents institutional support from multiple Asian governments through funds to the local venture ecosystem.
In addition to sovereign funds, this round also saw co-investments from Fubon Life, Taiwan Mobile, Wistron, Phison, and E Ink. This investor structure indicates a phenomenon: large enterprises are increasingly valuing the deployment of new technology ecosystems through venture capital funds.
Investor Composition Reflects Market Signals
Investor Type
Characteristics
Market Significance
Sovereign Funds
Government-backed, long-term perspective
Upgrading of Asian venture ecosystem
Corporate Investors
Industry background, strategic deployment
Integration of industry and venture capital
Strategic Shift: AI and Web3 as New Focus
In recent years, AppWorks has clearly focused on AI and Web3. Over 70% of its latest accelerator projects come from outside Taiwan. This data is crucial — it shows that AppWorks has evolved from a local Taiwanese venture firm into an investment platform targeting emerging markets across Asia.
The fund has already supported well-known companies like Lalamove (Southeast Asian mobility), Animoca Brands (Web3 gaming), and Flow (blockchain infrastructure). The success stories of these projects provide strong support for the new fund’s fundraising.
Evolution of Investment Focus
Geographical Scope: From Taiwan to the entire emerging Asian market
Technological Focus: From pan-entrepreneurship acceleration to specialization in AI and Web3
Project Stage: Focusing on early-stage projects with systematic support
Investment Cycle: Long-term companionship rather than short-term arbitrage
Why Is This Fundraising Worth Noticing?
On the surface, it’s just a venture fund closing its financing. But deeper down, it reflects three trends:
First, the institutional upgrading of Asian venture capital. The participation of sovereign funds indicates that Asian governments are beginning to support the venture ecosystem in a more systematic and long-term manner, rather than through scattered industry subsidies.
Second, Web3 and AI have become consensus tracks in Asian venture capital. Over 70% of AppWorks’ new projects are in Web3 and AI, showing that this is not just a choice of one institution but the direction of the entire Asian venture scene.
Third, Asian venture capital is forming regional cooperation. The participation of sovereign funds from three countries in a single fund is rare and indicates an increasing willingness for cross-border collaboration in the region’s venture ecosystem.
Summary
AppWorks’ completion of $386 million in total fundraising is not just a numerical milestone but a microcosm of the changing landscape of Asian venture capital. Sovereign fund participation, expanded geographical scope, and focused technological directions all point to one trend: Asian venture capital is moving from scattered investments toward ecological, institutionalized, and professionalized development. For those interested in Asian venture capital, Web3, and AI, this signal is very clear — the region’s venture infrastructure is rapidly maturing.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
Behind AppWorks' $386 million funding: Why Asian venture capital is rushing to get this card
AppWorks has just completed its fourth fundraise of $165 million, bringing the total fundraising scale to $386 million. While this number itself isn’t particularly large, the underlying changes are worth noting: sovereign funds are participating in Asian venture capital on a large scale for the first time, and this institution is redefining its role in the AI and Web3 era.
The Ecological Story Behind the Fundraising Scale
Since its founding in 2009, AppWorks has built an ecosystem comprising over 2,000 founders and 653 active startups. The Fund IV raise attracted the first joint participation of three major pan-Asian sovereign funds — Taiwan’s National Development Fund, Malaysia’s Jelawang Capital, and Korea’s KVIC. This is not just simple financing; it represents institutional support from multiple Asian governments through funds to the local venture ecosystem.
In addition to sovereign funds, this round also saw co-investments from Fubon Life, Taiwan Mobile, Wistron, Phison, and E Ink. This investor structure indicates a phenomenon: large enterprises are increasingly valuing the deployment of new technology ecosystems through venture capital funds.
Investor Composition Reflects Market Signals
Strategic Shift: AI and Web3 as New Focus
In recent years, AppWorks has clearly focused on AI and Web3. Over 70% of its latest accelerator projects come from outside Taiwan. This data is crucial — it shows that AppWorks has evolved from a local Taiwanese venture firm into an investment platform targeting emerging markets across Asia.
The fund has already supported well-known companies like Lalamove (Southeast Asian mobility), Animoca Brands (Web3 gaming), and Flow (blockchain infrastructure). The success stories of these projects provide strong support for the new fund’s fundraising.
Evolution of Investment Focus
Why Is This Fundraising Worth Noticing?
On the surface, it’s just a venture fund closing its financing. But deeper down, it reflects three trends:
First, the institutional upgrading of Asian venture capital. The participation of sovereign funds indicates that Asian governments are beginning to support the venture ecosystem in a more systematic and long-term manner, rather than through scattered industry subsidies.
Second, Web3 and AI have become consensus tracks in Asian venture capital. Over 70% of AppWorks’ new projects are in Web3 and AI, showing that this is not just a choice of one institution but the direction of the entire Asian venture scene.
Third, Asian venture capital is forming regional cooperation. The participation of sovereign funds from three countries in a single fund is rare and indicates an increasing willingness for cross-border collaboration in the region’s venture ecosystem.
Summary
AppWorks’ completion of $386 million in total fundraising is not just a numerical milestone but a microcosm of the changing landscape of Asian venture capital. Sovereign fund participation, expanded geographical scope, and focused technological directions all point to one trend: Asian venture capital is moving from scattered investments toward ecological, institutionalized, and professionalized development. For those interested in Asian venture capital, Web3, and AI, this signal is very clear — the region’s venture infrastructure is rapidly maturing.