Hark closed a $700 million Series A in late May 2026, one of the single largest early-stage funding rounds recorded this year and a striking example of how concentrated venture capital has become around a small group of companies.
While the specifics of a round this size draw immediate attention, the more instructive story is what it represents for the broader funding landscape: 2026 has seen enormous checks go to a narrow set of startups, even as overall venture activity becomes more selective and harder to access for companies without exceptional traction or category positioning.
Hark's round sits alongside other outsized early-2026 rounds β Stord's $250 million Series F and RADAR's $170 million Series B among them β that together illustrate a market defined less by broad-based recovery and more by extreme concentration at the top.
For founders raising in 2026, the lesson from rounds like Hark's isn't to benchmark against the headline number. It's to recognize that these outlier rounds reflect exceptional, company-specific circumstances rather than a market-wide return to easy capital β median rounds at every stage remain far more conservative.