Which investors participated in memyts seed and angel rounds?

Checked on December 13, 2025
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Executive summary

Available sources in the provided search results do not name any investors who participated in memyts’s seed or angel rounds; there is no mention of memyts or its fundraising participants in the materials returned (not found in current reporting). The documents focus broadly on seed and angel investor rankings, market trends and lists of active investors in 2025 without deal-level coverage of a company named “memyts” [1] [2] [3] [4].

1. What the sources actually cover — broad investor lists and market context

The returned material is dominated by industry-wide reporting: Forbes’ 2025 Midas Seed List profiles top seed investors and the criteria used to rank them (investors must have backed companies that were acquired for >= $50M or hold private valuations > $100M, among other thresholds) [1] [2]. Other sources compile active seed-investor directories and rankings (OpenVC, Seedtable, Eqvista, Gilion) or analyze aggregate seed funding trends — for example, Crunchbase reporting that US startups pulled in nearly $18 billion in seed funding in 2025 and that 42% of global seed dollars went to AI-related companies [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]. None of these items provide deal-level investor lists for a company named memyts [1] [2] [3] [4].

2. Why you won’t find memyts here — scope and selection bias in the results

The dataset you provided prioritizes high-level rankings, investor directories and macro reporting about seed and angel markets rather than individual cap tables or press releases listing round participants [1] [3] [4] [6]. That means even active-investor lists that are useful for sourcing potential backers (OpenVC, Seedtable) won’t substitute for a primary fundraising announcement or Crunchbase-style company page that records who actually wrote checks [4] [5] [6]. The absence of memyts in these results is therefore more likely a gap in the search sample than definitive proof the company didn’t raise seed or angel capital.

3. Where you normally would find seed/angel participants — and why those sources matter

Journalistic and data platforms that routinely publish deal participants include company press releases, Crunchbase/ PitchBook entries, SEC filings where applicable, and direct coverage in outlets like Forbes when a founder or investor speaks on the record [1] [3]. Investor lists and rankings (Forbes Midas Seed, Seedtable, OpenVC) are valuable for identifying likely participants but do not replace direct disclosure of round participants [1] [4] [5]. If you need the specific list of memyts’ seed and angel investors, the conventional next steps are to check the company’s press releases, Crunchbase or PitchBook entries, cap table filings, or LinkedIn/AngelList profiles — items not present in your provided set (not found in current reporting).

4. Market context that could help interpret memyts’ potential investor mix

Seed rounds in 2025 have grown larger and more institutionalized; many seed checks now sit between the hundreds of thousands and several million dollars, and institutional seed funds are participating earlier [3] [4] [8]. Angel activity remains significant but has shifted toward more disciplined, sector-focused angels and angel networks that syndicate deals [9] [10]. If memyts raised in this environment, likely participants could include a mix of high-activity seed funds, angel syndicates, and strategic angels aligned to the startup’s sector — although that is inference based on market reporting, not on any source naming memyts’ investors [3] [9] [10].

5. Limitations, next steps and practical recommendations

Limitations: the supplied search results do not include company-specific deal reports or databases listing memyts, so I cannot state who invested in memyts’ seed or angel rounds from these sources (not found in current reporting). Next steps: check Crunchbase, PitchBook, a company press release, memyts’ website or LinkedIn for investor announcements; search regulatory filings if the investors were institutional or if a convertible note/SAFE was registered. Also consider contacting the company or its public relations contact directly for a definitive cap-table disclosure. The sources you provided (Forbes, Crunchbase coverage, OpenVC, Seedtable) can guide which firms or angel networks are active and therefore plausible participants, but none list memyts’ round participants [1] [3] [4] [5].

If you want, I can search for memyts specifically in press releases and deal databases (Crunchbase/PitchBook/SEC) using additional source material; with those records I can produce a verified list of named investors and cite each entry.

Want to dive deeper?
Who led memyts seed funding round and what was the check size?
Which angel investors backed memyts and are any prominent founders or investors among them?
What valuation did memyts receive during its seed and angel financings?
How have memyts investors influenced the company’s strategy or board composition?
Have memyts investors participated in later funding rounds or secondary sales?