Investors are betting that the world still has room for one more AI startup promising to transform how software gets written, and NewsTrackerToday notes that this time the pitch comes with a familiar name attached. Kilo Code, founded in part by former GitLab leaders including ex-CEO Sid Sijbrandij, announced a fresh $8 million seed round backed by Breakers, Cota Capital, General Catalyst, Quiet Capital and Tokyo Black – a sign that the market is eager for credible teams in the fast-moving “AI coding” wave.
Sijbrandij, a self-taught engineer who helped turn GitLab into a globally adopted platform for collaborative development and deployment, stepped down last year to focus on cancer treatment but remained chairman. During his absence, the industry underwent a cultural shift: large language models have become the default tool for writing, testing and rewriting code, a trend widely referred to as “vibe-coding.” As Sophie Leclerc, technology sector analyst, observes, “AI coding tools are no longer side projects – they’re quickly becoming core infrastructure for engineering teams.”
Kilo Code emerged from that momentum. After an informal introduction last fall, Sijbrandij and Scott Breitenother – founder and former owner of Brooklyn Data – decided to launch the company together. Within minutes of their first conversation, the idea crystallized: build an AI assistant that integrates directly into developers’ workflows rather than forcing them to switch environments. Sijbrandij provided the initial capital, and Breitenother now runs the company day-to-day while staying in close contact with his co-founder.
Today the startup employs roughly 34 people across multiple continents. Its software plugs into tools like Cursor and Microsoft Visual Studio Code and relies heavily on OpenRouter, whose API offers access to a range of AI models, including xAI’s Grok Code Fast 1. According to internal usage data reviewed by NewsTrackerToday, Kilo Code processed more than 3 trillion tokens last month – evidence of just how quickly AI coding assistants are becoming embedded in real production environments.
Developers appear to agree. Daniel Langezaal, an engineer at Dutch e-commerce platform Plug&Pay, said his team adopted Kilo Code after testing options from several major AI vendors. He values the flexibility to use both premium and budget models and the company’s commitment to open-source contribution. What caught his attention even more was the productivity gain: a colleague who once needed days to craft a complex SQL query completed it in a single afternoon with Kilo Code’s help.
Momentum is building elsewhere too. GitLab itself – which is currently experimenting with agent-based AI task execution – took note of Kilo Code’s progress and negotiated an unusual arrangement: the company paid $1,000 for the exclusive right to match any acquisition offer the startup receives before August 2026. That clause alone reflects what Ethan Cole, chief economic analyst at NewsTrackerToday, calls “the growing strategic value of AI-augmented engineering tools in the broader labor market.”
Competition, however, is intense. The sector is crowded with high-valuation players. Windsurf reportedly secured elite hires in a multibillion-dollar talent deal last summer, while Cursor recently announced a multibillion-dollar valuation of its own. Meanwhile, industry leaders like Microsoft say that AI-written code already represents a significant share of their internal development output.
Kilo Code knows it must differentiate. While its tools currently cater to professional engineers, the team is preparing to expand into no-code and low-code territory – a booming niche filled by companies like Lovable and Bolt. Sijbrandij says the long-term vision is to become a platform where both newcomers and experienced developers build applications with minimal friction.
Lovable, one of the early standout startups in this category, raised funding in July at a valuation of $1.8 billion, underscoring how quickly this segment is scaling. From the vantage point of News Tracker Today, Kilo Code’s strategy of combining developer-first tools with accessible creation environments positions it well for a market that is converging around speed, simplicity and AI-driven automation.
In an industry where the next breakthrough can come from either a trillion-parameter model or a small team with the right idea, Kilo Code’s emergence suggests that the future of AI-assisted programming won’t be defined by giants alone – but by the companies that can integrate into the daily habits of millions of engineers.