AI Company Breaker Secures $2 Million in Pre-Seed Funding

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Australian-founded AI company Breaker has secured AUD2 million in pre-seed funding to scale its AI agents and unlock true mass autonomy in robotics. The round was led by Australian deep tech investment fund Main Sequence.

With this investment, Breaker will triple its team over the next six months and further expand its footprint in the US to meet growing demand.

Unlike traditional robotics companies focused on hardware, Breaker develops AI-powered software that enables robots to act, adapt and communicate like humans. Its technology allows a single operator to control up to 100 systems, empowering real-time, context-aware decision-making. With next-generation autonomy, natural language communication and advanced teaming, Breaker delivers a resilient and intuitive human-machine interface.

Alongside the funding, Breaker has announced strategic industry partnerships to advance its AI capabilities and autonomous technology. The company is collaborating with US-based SensorOps to use synthetic data and SensorOps’ simulation platform to enhance autonomous defence applications.

Breaker is also working with Airvolute to integrate its AI agent into advanced drone platforms, boosting autonomy in tactical operations. Additionally, Breaker has partnered with the Australian Institute of Machine Learning to drive AI research breakthroughs in intelligent and adaptive robotics.

“True autonomy isn’t just about building better individual robots, but about making them work together and work seamlessly with humans,” said Breaker co-CEO Matthew Buffa. “We believe that the future of robotics isn’t more hardware, it is smarter software that enables machines to collaborate and adapt dynamically, just like people do.”

Founded in 2023 by Matthew Buffa (ex-Anduril), Michael Irwin (ex-DroneShield), and Vanja Videnovic (ex-Hargrave Technologies), Breakers’s team combines deep expertise in AI, robotics, engineering and defence. They understand firsthand the limitations of today’s autonomous systems and are building a solution that moves beyond hype to practical applications.

By embedding AI agents directly on-device, Breaker’s first-of-its-kind platform eliminates reliance on external servers, ensuring robots remain reliable, responsive and resilient—even in disconnected, high-risk environments.

“Autonomous systems in defence often fall short, frontline operators still micromanage robots, making them more of a liability than an asset,” added Buffa. “Meanwhile, Australia’s defence forces face a different challenge: smaller-scale operations and limited resources. Autonomy must be trusted, adaptable and seamlessly integrated into human teams. By advancing AI-driven collaboration, we’re shaping the future of human-machine teaming.”

Already, Breaker has opened its US office in Austin and is working with US defence customers to deliver autonomy where it is needed most. Beyond defence, the company will scale its technology across industries like critical infrastructure security, search and rescue, farming and mining—sectors where synchronous decision-making is critical.

“Today’s autonomous systems still rely on bulky equipment, hard-coded instructions and skilled operators, limiting their scalability, adaptability and ROI,” said Main Sequence Partner Mike Zimmerman. “By combining generative AI with robotics, Breaker adds a step change in intelligence to these systems and delivers enormous advantages in utility while democratising access to these systems. We see this Physical AI as the next wave of what’s possible for autonomy.”

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