Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
VR headset brand with declining market presence in 2024; smartphone-based VR at $70-100 price point targeting early adopters; Homido V2 and Mini products represent premium cardboard-style viewer niche with limited distribution as standalone VR headsets proliferated.
Homido is a French consumer electronics brand founded to bring virtual reality experiences to mainstream consumers through smartphone-based VR headsets — cardboard and plastic viewer frames that mount a smartphone to deliver stereoscopic 3D content without requiring dedicated VR hardware. Founded in the early 2010s during the consumer VR enthusiasm triggered by the original Oculus Rift Kickstarter campaign, Homido positioned itself as a premium alternative to Google Cardboard viewers, offering better optics, adjustable lenses, and a more durable physical design at a price point in the $70–$100 range. The company targeted early adopters, gaming enthusiasts, and educational institutions as its primary customer segments.\n\nHomido's product line includes the Homido V2 headset, the Homido Mini (a foldable compact viewer), and the Homido Grab, which clips to eyeglasses. The company also developed the Homido Prime, a higher-end viewer with improved optics and a wider field of view. Homido maintained a companion app store with curated VR experiences across gaming, travel, and 360-degree video content, attempting to build a lightweight ecosystem around its hardware. Distribution was primarily through Amazon and European consumer electronics retailers, with limited brick-and-mortar presence.\n\nHomido's market position has declined significantly as the smartphone VR category itself has contracted. The simultaneous rise of standalone headsets — led by the Meta Quest series — and the stagnation of Google's Daydream platform (which Google formally discontinued in 2019) eliminated the mainstream consumer market for smartphone VR viewers. Homido's presence in the 2024 VR market is limited, with low sales volume, minimal product updates, and declining brand awareness compared to its early-category peak. The company represents a cautionary example of a brand whose initial timing was sound but whose product category was disrupted before it could achieve durable scale.
End-to-end vehicle commerce platform automating titling, registration, and compliance for OEM national sales; $17.3M from Activant, JPMorgan Payments, and Winnebago with 20+ OEM customers.
Ekho is an end-to-end vehicle commerce platform that provides digital sales infrastructure for automotive dealers and OEMs — handling the complete transaction lifecycle for nationwide vehicle sales including digital checkout, financing integration, titling, registration, and compliance management for vehicles sold across state lines. Founded and backed by Y Combinator, Activant Capital, JPMorgan Payments, and Winnebago Industries, Ekho raised $17.3 million total including a $15 million Series A, serving 20+ OEM customers including four publicly traded manufacturers.
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