
One year after Chinese start-up DeepSeek rattled the global tech industry with the release of a low-cost AI model, its domestic rivals are better prepared, vying with it to launch new models, some designed with more consumer appeal.
The Hangzhou-based firm’s meteoric rise in early 2025, during China’s Spring Festival holiday, upended China’s artificial intelligence industry, pushing low-cost open-source models to the forefront of its AI ecosystem.
This time, DeepSeek will be joined by several other firms in launching new products around China’s longest and busiest holiday period, which officially begins on 15 February.
While the industry was stunned when DeepSeek broke through with a strong AI model despite US export controls restricting access to advanced semiconductors, now the market wants to see what Chinese companies come up with next, said Alfredo Montufar-Helu, an MD at Ankura Consulting in Beijing.
“The surprise would be if some of these new models end up being underwhelming. I think there are high expectations here,” he said.
Zhipu AI on Wednesday released its latest AI model, which it said features enhanced coding capabilities and the ability to perform long-running tasks without any user prompts.
Next generation
ByteDance on Thursday officially unveiled Seedance 2.0, a video generation AI model “capable of producing cinematic blockbusters in seconds”, according to the Chinese state-backed Global Times newspaper.
ByteDance is also expected to roll out upgrades to its Doubao chatbot, currently China’s most popular AI app with 155.2 million weekly active users, according to QuestMobile.
DeepSeek, too, is preparing to release its next-generation model V4 and rival Alibaba is expected to unveil its Qwen 3.5 series, featuring improved mathematical reasoning and coding capabilities, tech industry news site The Information reported last month.
Read: AI won’t replace software, says Nvidia CEO amid market rout
Qwen developers submitted support code earlier this month for “upcoming Qwen 3.5 series models” to the open-source repository Hugging Face, typically a sign that a release is imminent.
Alibaba, ByteDance and DeepSeek have not announced a formal release date for their upgraded models. The companies did not respond to a request for comment.

DeepSeek’s initial release in January 2025 triggered a global tech selloff and wiped $593-billion from AI chip maker Nvidia’s market value in a single day and spurred its Chinese rivals to release upgrades to their own models.
In the past two years, DeepSeek’s models have repeatedly undercut competitors’ prices, pushing usage costs significantly below many US offerings.
In the US, investors saw DeepSeek’s claim it had built a model comparable to OpenAI’s best but at a fraction of the cost, as a challenge to the assumption that only companies spending tens of billions of dollars on computing infrastructure could produce cutting-edge AI.
A report by research group Rand on US-China AI competition published last month found that Chinese models operate at roughly one-sixth to one-fourth the cost of comparable US systems.
“DeepSeek showed the industry that you can create a very good model even when you’re resource-constrained,” said Lian Jye Su, chief analyst at tech research firm Omdia.
“The combination of open-source access, strong reasoning capabilities and low deployment costs has become a defining model for how Chinese vendors now approach foundation models.”
Before DeepSeek’s breakout, some Chinese industry leaders, including Baidu CEO Robin Li, had argued that closed-source systems would dominate.
Open source
Within days of DeepSeek’s assistant overtaking ChatGPT in Apple’s App Store downloads in the US, Baidu and other leading firms began opening portions of their own models. Hugging Face is now dominated by releases from Chinese tech giants such as Baidu, ByteDance and Tencent, and start-ups such as Moonshot.
“Chinese companies are actively embracing open source, significantly lowering the barriers for global developers and enterprises to access cutting-edge AI technology,” Global Times wrote in a Wednesday editorial praising Seedance 2.0.
Read: Dr Google, meet Dr Chatbot – neither is ready to see you now
Besides adopting DeepSeek’s open-source approach, competitors have also stepped up recruitment of top AI researchers.
While DeepSeek remains focused on advancing core model performance, rivals are shifting emphasis towards integrating AI into consumer services. Alibaba’s Qwen chatbot has recently experimented with enabling users to purchase goods directly through conversational prompts.

The pivot reflects commercial realities. Companies such as Alibaba face shareholder pressure to monetise AI investments through consumer and enterprise applications while continuing to fund expensive infrastructure expansion.
DeepSeek remains structurally distinct. Its parent company is a quantitative hedge fund controlled by founder Liang Wenfeng, allowing it to prioritise research over commercialisation and avoid external investor pressure. — Eduardo Baptista, (c) 2026 Reuters
Get breaking news from TechCentral on WhatsApp. Sign up here.
