Y Combinator abruptly shutters YC China

Prolific startup accelerator Y Combinator has abandoned plans to establish a branch of the program in China. The company cites a general change in strategy, but a deafening silence on the complexity and controversy of working with China right now suggests thereโ€™s more at play.

In a short blog post, YC leadership explained that โ€œas we worked to establish YC China, we had a change in leadership,โ€ viz. the replacement of CEO Sam Altman with Geoff Ralston in May. This apparently led to a complete about-face on YCโ€™s China strategy.

Qi Lu, hired a little more than a year ago to lead the YC China effort, is departing to run his own program, MiraclePlus. And Chinese companies will still be welcome at Y Combinator โ€œโ€” but as part of our U.S. program.โ€

A Y Combinator representative confirmed that it has no involvement with MiraclePlus or Qi Lu whatsoever, and that the company will no longer have any local presence in China at all.

Itโ€™s hard to accept at face value this vague explanation for such a costly, high-profile retreat.

Altman said when announcing Qiโ€™s hiring that he had been trying to recruit him โ€œfor years.โ€ As for the program itself, Altman said that โ€œChina has been an important missing piece of our puzzleโ€ and that they would be building โ€œa long-term local organization that will combine the best of Silicon Valley and China.โ€

That there is no mention of the uncertain international politics and U.S.-China relations right now, nor the explosive situation in Hong Kong, or ongoing human rights issues elsewhere in the country, seems a deliberate choice to make this move seem as ordinary as possible. But those things are major questions for anyone looking to do business in China, and itโ€™s hard to believe none had any bearing on the decision to abruptly pack up and leave a major enterprise behind.

It seems like with a company like Y Combinator, it would be easy enough to provide a modicum of transparency and say that there was a mismatch in culture, or the logistics werenโ€™t working out, or they ended up forwarding too many of the companies to the YC prime location anyway.

Perhaps that information was not deemed material for a public statement, but it only leaves inquiring minds to speculate. Was there pressure from this or that quarter? Is the culture at YC changing? Are other Altman-era projects being abandoned? Did the company gain anything at all by this boondoggle?

For such a major endeavor by one of the most prominent tech communities in Silicon Valley, this highly guarded and obviously incomplete account of its total abandonment seems strange and inadequate. Weโ€™ll be looking into it further.

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Startups

Startup Battlefield is returning to Australia โ€” hereโ€™s what happened the last time we came to Sydney

In November 2017, TechCrunch brought Startup Battlefield to Australia for the first time. Fifteen startups from across Australia and New Zealand took the stage in Sydney, pitched in front of investors and judges, and competed for a shot at the global stage.

It was one day. One stage. And what happened next is exactly why weโ€™re coming back.

Sydney, August 19, 2026

On August 19, Startup Battlefield is returning to Sydney in partnership with Stripe, one of the worldโ€™s most iconic technology companies. Weโ€™re taking over Stripe Tour Sydney for a night that the Australian startup ecosystem wonโ€™t forget. Ten selected companies will pitch live in front of top-tier investors, global press, and the best of Australiaโ€™s tech community. The top three will win up to $10,000 in Stripe fee credits. The grand winner walks away with something even bigger: automatic entry into Startup Battlefield 200 at TechCrunch Disrupt in San Francisco this October โ€” no application required, no competition. Just a guaranteed spot on the worldโ€™s most iconic startup stage.

But this isnโ€™t just an event for the 10 companies pitching. This is a moment for the entire Australian startup ecosystem โ€” the founders, investors, operators, and builders who have been quietly doing world-class work from the other side of the world. We want every ambitious founder in the room, whether youโ€™re onstage or in the audience, because this is the kind of night that reminds you why you started.

Find out who should apply and more details about the Stripe x Startup Battlefield here.

What happened the last time we were here

Donโ€™t just take our word for it. Hereโ€™s what came out of one day in Sydney in 2017.

The winner became a global health tech platform

Manuri Gunawardena was a final-year medical student when she pitched HealthMatch โ€” a machine learning platform matching patients with clinical trials. She won. That win turned into over $25 million raised, U.S. expansion, and over 1 million patients globally, backed by Square Peg Capital and SEEK co-founder Paul Bassat.

The runner-up built a global agtech company

Runner-up FluroSat used hyperspectral imaging to help farmers reduce waste. The Startup Battlefield stage gave the company its first real visibility. A Microsoft M12 seed round followed, then a merger to form Regrow Agriculture โ€” now with over $60 million raised and backed by Microsoft, Airtree, and Cargill.

Together, the winner and runner-up from one day in Sydney have raised over $85 million. Thatโ€™s what happens when you create a stage and invite the right people onto it.

The broader class of 2017

Across 26 Australian Battlefield alumni, the collective funding raised exceeds $147 million, with three successful acquisitions. Theyโ€™ve been backed by Y Combinator, Blackbird Ventures, Square Peg, Khosla Ventures, Microsoft, Airtree, Startmate, Techstars, and SOSV. CancerAid went on to become Osara Health. Life Whisperer partnered with fertility clinics internationally.

These were companies the world had never heard of before they stood in a room in Sydney and made their case. Thatโ€™s what Startup Battlefield does. It finds companies before the world knows their names.

Ready to make history?

We are looking for the next HealthMatch. The next Regrow. The next company nobody has heard of yet, building something that will matter.

Applications are open now through July 6.

Apply now for Stripe x Startup Battlefield Australia 2026. Free to apply. No equity taken. In-person event in Sydney, on August 19, 2026.

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Media & Entertainment

Founders Fund launches game show starring Sam Altman, Palmer Luckey, and other tech elites

Have you ever had the desire to see Sam Altman and Palmer Luckey square off over a moderately suspenseful card game? If so, you are in luck.

Silicon Valleyโ€™s leaders are rushing to embrace the power of media for the purposes of marketing and political capital. Now, in a sign of the times, Founders Fund, the venture capital firm co-founded by Peter Thiel, has launched its own game show.

โ€œMAFIA the GAME,โ€ will apparently be an ongoing thing, where prominent tech luminaries get together and face off over a game of cards (the show is named after the party-game favorite).

The spectacle is moderated by Pirate Wires editor Mike Solana (who is also the chief marketing officer at Founders Fund). The debut episode includes a whoโ€™s who of players โ€” Sam Altman; Palmer Luckey; Bryan Johnson, the famed biohacker who will (according to him) live forever; and Moxie Marlinspike, the founder of encrypted chat app Signal.

โ€œIโ€™m so f*cking bored with VC content,โ€ Solana told Newcomer, which originally reported the showโ€™s existence. โ€œThere has to be a more interesting way to get to know someone, and I think that this is a way more interesting way to get to know someone.โ€

TechCrunch reached out to Founders Fund for more information on the program.

In many ways, having a reality-TV-esque platform is just good business these days. The internet has turned the world into a population of chronic media consumers, and the average American spends around 2.5 hours on social media per day. Much of that time is spent scrolling through an endless flood of advertising-laced memes and videos.

In the modern era, the road to power and influence is paved with infotainment.

Companies and executives have sought to take advantage of this new reality in different ways. OpenAI recently raised some eyebrows when it procured TBPN, the buzzy founder-led podcast. Meanwhile, a number of techโ€™s most prominent players have leveraged virality to their advantage. Johnson, for instance, has managed to grow his following through a very active (and quite bizarre) social media presence. Elon Musk, meanwhile, has also managed to leverage his public persona to go viral (although arguments could be made that his online presence has sometimes hurt rather than helped his businesses).

This trend has also spread to the startup space, where people like Cluely CEO Chungin โ€œRoyโ€ Lee have demonstrated the power of being a one-man viral hype machine.

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