AI prowess redefining business niches
As Chinese startups go abroad, they are reshaping how artificial intelligence is built and deployed in multiple domains
Their prospectuses also revealed a strategic divergence. One route, exemplified by Zhipu AI, focuses on building foundational models and selling infrastructure-level capabilities to enterprises and governments. The other, taken by MiniMax, leans toward consumer-facing applications, from voice and video generation to creative tools.
Zhipu's overseas expansion remains in its early stages. As of the first half of 2025, overseas revenue accounted for 11.6 percent of its total, with Southeast Asia contributing the bulk — around 17.9 million yuan ($2.5 million). MiniMax, by contrast, has prioritized global user acquisition from the outset, embedding itself in creative, media and customer-service workflows across continents.
Yet both paths reflect a common reality: China's AI firms are no longer peripheral players in global innovation. They are becoming structural contributors.
One of the clearest signals of that shift lies in open-source AI. According to a joint report by Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Hugging Face, Chinese-developed open-source large language models accounted for 17.1 percent of global downloads over the past year, surpassing the United States' 15.8 percent for the first time.
Models such as DeepSeek's V3 and Moonshot AI's Kimi K2 have driven a surge in adoption, together representing nearly 30 percent of global usage of open-source large language models last year, the report said.
Wei Kai, head of the artificial intelligence research institute at the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology, said the data reflected "a systemic upgrade in China's overall AI capabilities".
"This is not a single breakthrough," Wei said. "It is the result of sustained investment, open ecosystems and the ability to integrate models with real-world scenarios at scale."
China's emphasis on open source is not accidental. More than 30 million open-source projects have been incubated nationwide, spanning chips, frameworks and applications. The country now counts over 9.4 million software developers, with open-source contributors ranking second globally.
PwC estimates that AI could add up to $7 trillion to China's GDP by 2030. Market consultancy CCID projects China's AI industry will grow from 398.5 billion yuan in 2025 to more than 1.7 trillion yuan by 2035.
If software is one pillar of China's AI export push, robotics is rapidly becoming another. At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in 2026, the presence of Chinese companies is set to undergo a structural shift.





















