FuriosaAI, a South Korean semiconductor firm, begins commercial production of its latest inference chip this month, entering Nvidia’s territory. The RNGD chip claims strong AI performance with lower power use, targeting a market Nvidia leads. OpenAI, LG, and Meta have all shown interest, as FuriosaAI positions itself against Nvidia’s dominance.
FuriosaAI launched in 2017 under CEO June Paik, a former Samsung memory-chip engineer and AMD GPU designer. The company now prepares to mass-produce its RNGD chip, focusing on AI inference workloads.
OpenAI recently demonstrated RNGD at an event in Seoul, where LG also reported “excellent real-world performance” during its testing phase. RNGD, short for “renegade,” supports high-performance inference with improved energy efficiency, a key challenge in AI hardware.
Nvidia dominates AI hardware, especially for training models, but FuriosaAI sees an opening in inference, where energy use matters more. FuriosaAI says RNGD can run large AI models while using less power than Nvidia’s top GPUs.
CEO Paik presented RNGD at Stanford’s Hot Chips conference, showcasing Llama model performance with better power efficiency. “It was a moment where we felt we could really move forward with our chip with confidence,” Paik said.
June Paik founded FuriosaAI after recovering from an Achilles injury sustained at a Samsung soccer match. During recovery, he studied AI through Stanford’s online courses.
After returning to Samsung, he chose to leave and build something in AI. He then formed FuriosaAI with former colleagues in hardware and algorithms.
Hanjoon Kim, the current CTO, worked with Paik at Samsung and co-founded the startup. He says Paik focused on fast decisions and long-term strategies.
The startup adopted strategies from the book “Blitzscaling,” promoting speed and bold action in early market entry. Paik emphasized this during the company’s first development stages.
FuriosaAI completed a new funding round, valuing the company at nearly $700 million. Meta showed acquisition interest last year, though no deal was finalized.
FuriosaAI says it is now in talks with more potential clients and industry players. These discussions follow successful demonstrations of RNGD’s AI inference capabilities.
According to Paik, RNGD rivals Nvidia’s GPUs while using less energy, which lowers operating costs. “A market dominated by a single player that’s not a healthy ecosystem, is it?” he said.
South Korea supports AI development through both private and government initiatives. Nvidia has already finalized GPU supply deals with South Korea, arranged by the government.
FuriosaAI continues building commercial partnerships as it moves into production. The company remains focused on AI inference chips with performance and power advantages.
The post FuriosaAI Targets Nvidia with Efficient AI Chip Rolling Out This Month appeared first on CoinCentral.

