Jeff Bezos has finally shared the clearest explanation yet about his mysterious startup, Project Prometheus, and it turns out the company is not building robots after all.
During a CNBC interview with Andrew Ross Sorkin on Wednesday, the Amazon founder quickly corrected speculation surrounding the fast-rising artificial intelligence company. When Sorkin described Prometheus as an “AI robotics” venture, Bezos interrupted and pushed back immediately.
“We have nothing to do with robotics,” Bezos said.
The billionaire entrepreneur then revealed that Prometheus focuses on building what he called an “artificial general engineer,” a next-generation AI system designed to help engineers create and design physical objects more efficiently.
Bezos compared the technology to a highly advanced version of computer-aided design, commonly known as CAD. However, he stressed that the description still oversimplifies the company’s real ambitions.
“It’s a very, very modern version of CAD,” Bezos explained, while adding that the startup remains in its early stages and is still operating quietly behind the scenes.
The comments mark the first meaningful public insight into Prometheus since reports about the company surfaced in late 2025. Since then, speculation has dominated conversations across Silicon Valley, especially because the company hired top engineers and AI experts from firms like OpenAI, DeepMind, Meta, and xAI.
Prometheus launched with an impressive $6.2 billion in funding led by Bezos and former Google X executive Vik Bajaj. Reports later revealed that the company secured another massive investment round worth $10 billion, pushing its valuation to an estimated $38 billion. Financial giants JPMorgan Chase and BlackRock reportedly joined the funding round.
The company currently operates from offices in San Francisco, London, and Zurich, while employing roughly 120 specialists across AI, engineering, and advanced computing.
For months, analysts believed Prometheus focused heavily on robotics and factory automation. Much of that speculation came from LinkedIn activity and hiring patterns connected to robotics researchers and manufacturing experts. Bezos’ latest comments now paint a different picture.
Instead of building humanoid machines, Prometheus appears to be developing intelligent engineering software capable of designing real-world products, systems, and industrial components with the help of advanced AI reasoning.
Bezos also hinted that the technology could significantly support Blue Origin, his aerospace venture competing in the global space race. Still, he made it clear that Prometheus deserves independent attention and leadership.
“This is its own big idea,” Bezos said.
That statement alone reveals how seriously the billionaire views the company’s future potential. Bezos rarely takes operational roles in startups outside Amazon, making his decision to serve as co-CEO a strong signal of confidence in Prometheus’ long-term vision.
The startup now enters a rapidly growing AI market where companies race to dominate everything from generative AI to industrial automation. However, Prometheus could carve out a unique lane by focusing on AI-assisted engineering rather than consumer chatbots or robotics hardware.
If successful, the company may eventually transform how cars, spacecraft, electronics, and industrial machines are designed across multiple industries.
As global competition around artificial intelligence intensifies, Bezos’ latest venture could become one of the most influential AI companies of the decade.
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