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NAVER D2SF, the corporate venture arm of NAVER, has made a new investment in Sorcerics, a startup developing autonomous, context-aware AI systems for the home. The company is preparing for a commercial launch in North America in the first quarter of 2026.
Sorcerics is building what it describes as an “ambient AI” home system—technology designed to operate continuously in the background, understanding user behaviour and surroundings to deliver services without explicit commands. The approach contrasts with conventional smart home products that rely largely on voice prompts or manual inputs.
While smart speakers and connected devices are now common in many households, industry observers note that most systems remain reactive rather than adaptive. Sorcerics is positioning itself around a different premise: homes that interpret context and act independently.
The company’s system uses a single camera combined with a proprietary large language model to analyse gestures, behaviour and environmental signals. Rather than executing isolated commands, the AI is designed to infer user intent—for example, adjusting lighting based on signs that a user is preparing to sleep, rather than simply responding to a switch or voice request.
A key technical focus is on-device processing. Sorcerics said its system can run up to five AI models locally, reducing reliance on cloud computing and addressing privacy concerns that have slowed adoption of always-on home technologies.
Beyond autonomy, Sorcerics is also targeting hardware cost and design—two factors that have limited wider smart home adoption. The company said its hardware is developed at roughly one-quarter of the cost of comparable systems, while maintaining an emphasis on consumer-ready design.
This combination of local AI processing, lower price points and minimal hardware footprint reflects a broader shift in the AI sector, where startups are increasingly optimising models to run efficiently on devices rather than depending solely on cloud infrastructure.
Sorcerics is led by CEO Hyeonjong Ryu, whose founding team brings more than a decade of experience in product development and research at global technology firms including Google. The company is currently running beta tests in North America.
Its go-to-market roadmap includes:
The company is also recruiting across AI, software, hardware and business roles as it prepares to scale.
For NAVER D2SF, the investment aligns with its focus on deep-tech startups that can scale globally. Yang Sang-hwan, Head of NAVER D2SF, said existing smart home products still fall short of user expectations.
“The true value of technology lies not in users having to understand and learn it, but in technology understanding users and delivering services naturally,” Yang said.
“Sorcerics has the potential to overcome the limitations of existing smart home solutions and create truly convenient smart environments.”
NAVER D2SF said more than 80% of its portfolio companies are pursuing overseas markets, reflecting a broader push among Korean startups to expand beyond domestic demand.
Despite widespread smart device adoption—nearly half of North American households already own at least one connected home product—the market remains fragmented. Many systems lack integration across devices or fail to anticipate user needs, leaving room for startups exploring more autonomous approaches.
Analysts note that success will depend not only on technical performance, but also on trust, privacy safeguards and long-term reliability—areas where fully autonomous systems face higher scrutiny.
NAVER D2SF’s investment in Sorcerics highlights growing investor interest in ambient, on-device AI as the next phase of the smart home market. As consumer expectations shift from command-based controls to proactive assistance, startups that can balance autonomy with privacy and cost efficiency may find an opening in an otherwise crowded sector.
For Sorcerics, the challenge now lies in translating technical ambition into sustained consumer adoption as it heads toward a critical global launch window in 2026.