Raising a $20 million Series B for an eSports company in Q4 of 2025 sounds, on paper, like exactly the kind of pitch that gets politely ended after 10 minutes. The venture market had collapsed around anything that wasn’t AI. One in three introductory calls, Dylan Robbins later said, ended before he even started talking – with the investor cutting in to say they only wrote AI checks now. And yet Lucra Sports, his white-label gaming competition platform, secured a lead from ARK Invest’s venture fund – a firm that had previously backed and exited Skillz at a loss. The story of how he did it is one that NewsTrackerToday picked out as the more instructive fundraising case of the quarter precisely because the pitch itself was designed to short-circuit the AI objection entirely.
Lucra’s product is not complicated to describe. Businesses that serve consumers – think a golf entertainment venue, a bar-and-grill chain, a chess brand – license Lucra’s platform to run online gaming competitions and friendly wagers for their customers. Instead of a loyalty coupon, you get a tournament. Five Iron Golf is a customer. Dave & Buster’s is a customer. Chess King is a customer. The business had shown consistent year-over-year growth going into the raise. None of that, it turned out, was enough to get past the gatekeeper question of 2025 and early 2026: where is the AI angle?
Robbins’ solution was to build the AI argument directly into the deck’s opening. His revised pitch claimed a dual-hedge thesis: if AI succeeds and generates widespread productivity gains, people will have more leisure time – time they might fill with exactly the kind of social gaming experiences Lucra enables. And if AI disappoints or saturates the investment market, a non-AI company with genuine fundamentals starts to look like disciplined diversification. Translation: this pitch works whether the AI wave crests or breaks. ARK, which thinks in long multi-year cycles, found that framing credible. They wrote a small check in the Series A and, by the end of 2025 after Robbins reconnected with his contact, agreed to lead the Series B. That logical pivot is what NewsTrackerToday zeroed in on as the actual mechanism behind the raise – not the relationship story, which is famous now but downstream of the pitch itself.
Sophie Leclerc, who follows the technology sector, offers a structural read: “What Robbins did was recognize that AI dominance in VC wasn’t a phase, it was the operating condition for the next several years. The rational response wasn’t to pretend to be an AI company or to wait it out. It was to reframe the business thesis so that AI’s success became an argument for his product category rather than a reason to deprioritize it. That’s actually fairly sophisticated positioning for a founder in a sector that VCs had already written off.” The TAM Robbins pitched was nearly everyone aged 18 to 70 who plays any game at all – pickleball, Wordle, card games, digital competitions. One investor sent back a rejection citing the TAM as too small, which Robbins framed as a reminder to think even bigger.
Isabella Moretti reads the deal economics with precision: “The ARK Venture Fund leading a Series B in a non-AI company is notable partly because it signals they see a consumer-engagement play with real fundamentals, not just a growth story propped up by AI optionality. The round size of $20 million suggests this is still a relatively capital-efficient business. Consistent year-over-year growth without a single-quarter spike is exactly what institutional VCs want to see at Series B: it tells you the unit economics work across market conditions.” That observation is what NewsTrackerToday put on record because the Lucra raise gets written about as a relationship story – dart bar, chance meeting – but the fundamentals check is the part that actually made the round close.
Robbins’ advice distilled to two things: be genuinely friendly everywhere, because you cannot identify your best future investor in advance, and lead with AI in your deck whether you are building AI or not. Bear in mind both of those are tactical responses to a specific market moment. They work now. They may not work when the AI funding cycle moves on and VCs start chasing the next category. The honest implication of the Lucra story – and the one News Tracker Today cross-checked against the broader pattern of non-AI raises in 2025 and early 2026 – is that the founder who survives a VC monoculture is not the one who finds a clever hack. It is the one whose business would have been fundable regardless, and who happened to also learn the language the room was speaking that season.