Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Himalayan Compute: 100 VCs Who Said No


 

HIMALAYAN COMPUTE

A Comedy of Errors in 100 Investor Meetings

(or: How to Raise $100M at a $1B Valuation by Collecting 100 Different Flavors of “No”)

You walk into Sand Hill Road wearing the confidence of a man who has personally negotiated with gravity.

Your pitch deck is 87 slides long, but don’t worry—you only plan to show 63 of them.

Your startup is called Himalayan Compute, and it will offer the cheapest compute in the world, powered by Himalayan rivers, cooled by mountain air, and blessed by ancient monks who have been meditating on server uptime since the Vedic era.

You are raising $100 million at a $1 billion valuation, pre-revenue, pre-data center, pre-permit, and pre-reality.

But you have something more important than traction.

You have vision.

And your roadmap ends with a trillion-dollar valuation in 10 years.

In other words: you are exactly the kind of founder venture capitalists love to reject.

So you schedule meetings.

And now, in an unprecedented global gathering of peak overconfidence, the 100 most powerful venture capitalists on Earth assemble—not to fund you…

…but to say “no” in the most creative ways possible.

Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Venture Capital Olympics.


100 Highly Creative Ways Venture Capitalists Say NO

1. Sequoia Capital

“We love the ambition. But we only invest in founders who already own three small countries.”

2. Andreessen Horowitz

“This is interesting. But have you considered pivoting into AI-powered Himalayan goats?”

3. Accel

“We’re bullish on compute, but bearish on… mountains.”

4. Benchmark

“We only invest in companies that can become trillion-dollar businesses in nine years.”

5. Greylock

“This is a great idea. We just don’t want to be involved when the Nepali Parliament discovers what GPUs are.”

6. Kleiner Perkins

“We like climate tech, but this sounds like… climate geography.”

7. Lightspeed

“We’re called Lightspeed, not Hydrospeed.”

8. Founders Fund

“This feels like a government project pretending to be a startup pretending to be a nation-state.”

9. SoftBank

“We love big visions. But this one is too stable. We prefer chaos.”

10. Tiger Global

“Can you grow 400% month-over-month while building hydroelectric dams?”




11. Coatue

“We only invest in businesses we don’t understand, but this is too confusing.”

12. General Catalyst

“We like this, but can you make it more… spiritual?”

13. Khosla Ventures

“We’re looking for something riskier. Like nuclear fusion in a garage.”

14. NEA

“This is amazing. Unfortunately, it requires execution.”

15. Bessemer

“Rule of 40. Your EBITDA is currently -Himalayan.”

16. Insight Partners

“This isn’t SaaS. It’s… SAAS (Snow As A Service).”

17. Y Combinator

“Come back when you have $5,000 in monthly revenue and a demo video.”

18. Index Ventures

“This sounds like Europe. We hate that.”

19. DST Global

“Too early.”

20. Battery Ventures

“We like batteries. You have rivers.”




21. IVP

“We’re late-stage. Your company is pre-stage, pre-reality.”

22. Redpoint

“This is not a point. This is a mountain range.”

23. Union Square Ventures

“We invest in networks. This is… electricity.”

24. First Round Capital

“This is not a first round. This is a first civilization.”

25. Menlo Ventures

“We don’t do hardware.”

26. GGV Capital

“We’d love to invest, but we’re currently being geopolitically reorganized.”

27. Spark Capital

“We love your spark. We’re just worried you might start a fire in the Himalayas.”

28. Eclipse Ventures

“We invest in physical infrastructure, but only if it’s located near good sushi.”

29. Lux Capital

“This is too grounded. We prefer things that violate physics.”

30. Initialized Capital

“We like the story, but it’s missing a key element: revenue.”




31. A16Z Crypto

“Can you tokenize the hydropower and launch a Himalayan coin?”

32. Pantera

“Is this compute secured by proof-of-work or proof-of-mountain?”

33. Paradigm

“We love it, but does Nepal have enough memes?”

34. Coinbase Ventures

“Too much infrastructure. Not enough hype.”

35. Polychain

“Hydropower is centralized. That’s against our religion.”

36. Multicoin

“We would invest, but we’re currently in a long-term relationship with Solana.”

37. DCG

“We’d love to invest, but we’re busy explaining our balance sheet.”

38. Jump Crypto

“Compute is bullish, but rivers are bearish.”

39. Alameda (from prison)

“We’re interested. Can you wire funds to our lawyer?”

40. Binance Labs

“We love Nepal. But can you relocate it to the Cayman Islands?”





41. Temasek

“We like sovereign-scale projects, but your sovereignty is too sovereign.”

42. GIC

“This is impressive. But we only invest in things that are already built.”

43. Mubadala

“Can you guarantee the Himalayas will not move?”

44. ADQ

“This is too cold. We invest in things that are at least 110°F.”

45. Qatar Investment Authority

“We love big visions. But can you host the FIFA World Cup in the data center?”

46. Saudi PIF

“Can you make it bigger? Like… desert compute?”

47. Blackstone

“We would invest if this were a parking lot.”

48. Apollo

“Where’s the debt? We need suffering.”

49. Carlyle

“Interesting, but we prefer wars, not waterfalls.”

50. KKR

“We like the idea, but can you lay off 30% of Nepal first?”




51. Goldman Sachs

“This is not an investment. This is a prophecy.”

52. Morgan Stanley

“We like it, but it lacks a derivatives market.”

53. JP Morgan

“We love the Himalayas, but our compliance team just fainted.”

54. Citi

“We’d invest, but we’re currently busy reorganizing ourselves.”

55. Bank of America

“This sounds like a wonderful PowerPoint. Unfortunately, we invest in numbers.”

56. Barclays

“We love this. But we can’t find Nepal on the map.”

57. Credit Suisse (ghost division)

“We already invested. You just can’t see it.”

58. Deutsche Bank

“This is too optimistic. Can you add existential dread?”

59. HSBC

“We like it. But can you do it in London?”

60. Wells Fargo

“We already invested without telling you. Also we opened 14 accounts in your name.”




61. Peter Thiel

“This is too democratic.”

62. Elon Musk

“Cool. But can you build it on Mars?”

63. Reid Hoffman

“This is a great idea, but where’s the social network layer?”

64. Marc Benioff

“If you call it Himalayan CloudForce, we’ll talk.”

65. Jeff Bezos

“Can you deliver compute in two days with Prime?”

66. Larry Ellison

“Too modern. Needs more Oracle.”

67. Bill Gates

“Nice. But have you considered malaria?”

68. Mark Zuckerberg

“This is great. But can you make it a metaverse for monks?”

69. Sam Altman

“We love compute. But we prefer to own it ourselves.”

70. Jensen Huang

“We like the vision. But do you have 400,000 GPUs in your basement?”




71. Naval Ravikant

“This is a good idea, but I only invest in leverage. Mountains are too literal.”

72. Chamath Palihapitiya

“This is incredible. I’ll tweet support, then disappear.”

73. Jason Calacanis

“I’ll invest $25K, but only if you rename it ‘Uber for Hydropower.’”

74. Mark Cuban

“I’m out. Too many syllables.”

75. Ray Dalio

“Your biggest risk is internal conflict. Have you meditated with Nepal?”

76. Kevin O’Leary

“Royalty deal. I want 9% of every Himalayan raindrop.”

77. Oprah

“You get a GPU! You get a GPU! Actually no, nobody gets a GPU.”

78. Warren Buffett

“I don’t invest in things I don’t understand. I do not understand electricity.”

79. Charlie Munger (from beyond)

“This is a damn foolish idea. I love it. But no.”

80. Jack Ma

“This is too American. You need more mysterious disappearance.”




81. Paul Graham

“This is not a startup. This is a national infrastructure hallucination.”

82. Jessica Livingston

“This is inspiring. But are you sure you’re not starting a religion?”

83. Vinod Khosla (again, louder)

“I want you to replace all humans with GPUs. But you’re starting with Nepal. Too slow.”

84. Mary Meeker

“Your TAM slide is missing one thing: reality.”

85. Michael Moritz

“This is a wonderful story. But stories don’t generate IRR.”

86. Chris Sacca

“I would invest, but I only fund companies that look good in a cowboy shirt.”

87. Ron Conway

“I love founders. But your founder energy is too radioactive.”

88. David Sacks

“Have you considered building this in Florida?”

89. Bill Gurley

“This is not disruption. This is an act of Himalayan aggression.”

90. Fred Wilson

“Your community is strong. But your cap table is spiritually offensive.”




91. Paul Allen’s Foundation

“We would invest, but we’re dead.”

92. Steve Jobs’ ghost

“This is not magical enough.”

93. Elon Musk’s AI clone

“This will work. Therefore it will fail.”

94. A Random VC in a Patagonia vest

“This is too ambitious. Can you build a smaller mountain?”

95. Another Random VC

“We only invest in founders who dropped out of Stanford.”

96. A Climate VC

“Hydropower is good. But have you considered wind-powered GPUs strapped to yaks?”

97. A Deep Tech VC

“We love deep tech. But this is deep geography.”

98. A Seed Investor

“Come back when you’ve built a 5GW data center using duct tape.”

99. A Family Office

“We only invest in safe things. Like volatile crypto.”

100. The Final Boss VC

“We love everything about this. It’s visionary. It’s bold. It’s historic.”

(dramatic pause)

“But… we’re going to pass.”




The Closing Scene

You exit Sand Hill Road with 100 rejection emails.

But you are not discouraged.

Because every “no” has only confirmed one thing:

they don’t deserve the Himalayas.

You look toward the mountains.

The rivers roar.

A GPU somewhere sheds a single tear.

And in the distance, a monk whispers:

“Series A is temporary.
Hydropower is forever.”

And thus begins the legend of Himalayan Compute—

the only startup in history to be rejected by 100 investors…

and still somehow raise $100M…

from the Government of Nepal, the Nepali diaspora, and one mysterious billionaire who thought Nepal was a new NVIDIA chip.

The end.




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