Muybridge has closed an oversubscribed $16 million Series A, led by Investinor, Fairpoint, Idekapital, and RunwayFBU, with participation from multiple Nordic tech founders and operators. The funding will accelerate Muybridge’s international expansion across Europe and the United States, scale its commercial organisation, and extend the technology roadmap of its software-defined imaging platform.
During the past year, Muybridge has completed deployments across major European football leagues, US Open and ATP Tour tennis, NBA, NHL, PGA Tour golf, rugby, and Premier Padel. Each represents a beachhead in a sport that Muybridge intends to scale rapidly across leagues, venues, broadcasters, and rights holders.
“2025 was the year our technology proved itself on the biggest stages in sport. 2026 is the year we build the organisation to match that demand. This raise is about execution – expanding our technology, products, partnerships and organisation to meet our growth ambitions,” said Håkon Espeland, CEO, Muybridge.
Muybridge has invented a new class of imaging technology: the weightless camera. Where conventional broadcast demands fleets of physical cameras, operators, cabling, and days of rigging, Muybridge’s platform replaces all of it with a compact array of hundreds of 4K sensors and a proprietary GPU software stack. The cameras themselves – the angles, the movements, the perspectives – exist entirely in software.
Muybridge’s commercial model is built to scale through partnerships with technology providers, managed service providers, and system integrators. In September 2025, Muybridge appointed Aneesh Rajaram as chief commercial officer. Rajaram has built his career at the intersection of embedded systems and broadcast technology, industries defined by complex, multi-tiered value chains that demand both technical credibility and commercial discipline. With two major exits in the sector and a network that spans the global broadcast ecosystem, his appointment marks Muybridge’s transition from pioneering deployments to a repeatable, high-velocity commercial operation across multiple markets.
“The oversubscription of this round says something important about where investor conviction is moving,” said Torjus Falkanger, investment manager, Investinor. “Capital is gravitating towards companies built on deep, proprietary technology – platforms that create durable, hard-to-replicate value in the physical world. Muybridge is exactly that: real technology, already proven on the biggest stages in sport, with the architecture to disrupt industries that have seen no fundamental disruption in decades. That combination does not come along often.”