Founders club scale noted
Bay Area Founders Club (noted as @BFC_Global) says it connects thousands of startups and has a large community reach, making it a concentrated channel to access Seed→Series B AI teams. That scale underpins the appeal of their MissionX GPU offering for quick go‑to‑market. (x.com)
BFC’s main site lists 73,745+ members, 3,833+ startups and 737+ VCs in its public membership counters. (bayareafoundersclub.com) (bayareafoundersclub.com) The organization’s Substack and other public profiles give larger figures — Substack advertises “100K+ members | 5,000+ startups” while YouTube/Linktree pages show counts in the 30K–50K range, producing a span of public membership claims across platforms. (bayareafoundersclub.substack.com) (bayareafoundersclub.substack.com) BFC’s event programming includes recurring AI demo nights and summit-scale gatherings; its Substack archive lists AI Demo Night (Feb. 26) and promotional pages reference a “Renaissance Summit 2026” billed with ~2,000 founders and dozens of AI speakers. (bayareafoundersclub.substack.com) (bayareafoundersclub.substack.com) MissionX is profiled as a Palo Alto GPU-cloud provider founded in 2025 and listed as unfunded in commercial databases that track startups and competitors. (tracxn.com) (tracxn.com) MissionX’s product pages advertise configurable bare‑metal GPU instances and a reserved “MX7” tier that explicitly references the NVIDIA GB200 (Blackwell) platform, and its pricing page claims up to “35x faster and 80% less expensive” relative to generalized public clouds. (missionx.net) (missionx.net) Public tech clouds and specialized providers are already offering GB200-based capacity — Google Cloud’s A4X preview and Azure’s ND‑GB200‑v6 series both expose GB200 systems — placing MissionX’s MX7 on the same GB200 hardware roadmap that major clouds are deploying. (cloud.google.com) (cloud.google.com)