A year after being pushed out of Intel, Pat Gelsinger is still waking up at 4 a.m., still in the thick of the semiconductor wars โ just on a different battlefield. Now a general partner at venture firm Playground Global, heโs working with 10 startups. But one portfolio company has captured an outsized share of his attention: xLight, a semiconductor startup that last Monday announced it has struck a preliminary deal for up to $150 million from the U.S. Commerce Department, with the government set to become a meaningful shareholder.
Itโs a nice feather in the cap of Gelsinger, who spent 35 years across two stints at Intel before the board showed him the door late last year owing to a lack of confidence in his turnaround plans. But the xLight deal is also shining a spotlight on a trend thatโs making people in Silicon Valley quietly uncomfortable: the Trump administration taking equity stakes in strategically important companies.
โWhat the hell happened to free enterprise?โ California Governor Gavin Newsom asked at a speaking event this week, capturing the unease thatโs rippling through an industry that has long prided itself on its free-market principles.
Speaking at one of TechCrunchโs StrictlyVC events at Playground Global, Gelsinger โ who is xLightโs executive chairman โ seemed unbothered by the philosophical debate. Heโs more focused on his bet that xLight can solve what he sees as the semiconductor industryโs biggest bottleneck: lithography, the process of etching microscopic patterns onto silicon wafers. The startup is developing massive โfree electron lasersโ powered by particle accelerators that could revolutionize chip manufacturing. If the technology works at scale, that is.
โYou know, I have this long-term mission to continue to see Mooreโs law in the semiconductor industry,โ Gelsinger said, referencing the decades-old principle that computing power should double every two years. โWe think this is the technology that will wake up Mooreโs law.โ
The xLight deal is the first Chips and Science Act award under Trumpโs second term, using funding earmarked for early-stage companies with promising technologies. Notably, the deal is currently at the letter of intent stage, meaning itโs not finalized and details could still change. When pressed on whether the funding could end up being double the announced amount โ or potentially not materialize at all โ Gelsinger was candid.
โWeโve agreed in principle on the terms, but like any of these contracts, thereโs still work to get done,โ he said.
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The technology xLight is pursuing is pretty serious in both scale and ambition. The company plans to build machines roughly 100 meters by 50 meters โ about the size of a football field โ that will sit outside semiconductor fabrication plants. These free electron lasers would generate extreme ultraviolet light at wavelengths as precise as 2 nanometers, far more powerful than the 13.5 nanometer wavelengths currently used by ASML, the Dutch giant that utterly dominates the EUV lithography market.
โAbout half of the capital goes into lithography,โ Gelsinger explained of the entire semiconductor industry. โIn the middle of a lithography machine is light. . . [and] this ability to keep innovating for shorter wavelength, higher power light is the essence of being able to continue to innovate for more advanced semiconductors.
Leading xLight is Nicholas Kelez, whose background is unusual for the semiconductor world. Before founding xLight, Kelez led quantum computer development efforts at PsiQuantum (a Playground Global portfolio company) and spent two decades building large-scale X-ray science facilities at national labs including SLAC and Lawrence Berkeley, where he was Chief Engineer for the Linac Coherent Light Source.
So why is this viable now when ASML abandoned a similar approach almost a decade ago? โThe difference was the technology wasnโt as mature,โ Kelez explained. Back then, only a handful of extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUV) machines existed, and the industry had already sunk tens of billions into the incumbent technology. โIt just wasnโt the time to take on something completely new and orthogonal.โ
Now, with EUV ubiquitous in leading-edge semiconductor manufacturing and existing light source technology hitting its limits, the timing looks better. The key innovation, according to Kelez, is treating light like a utility rather than building it into each machine. โWe go away from building an integrated light source with the tool, which is what [ASML does] now and that fundamentally constrains you to make it smaller and less powerful,โ he said. And instead, โWe treat light the same way you treat electrical power or HVAC. We build outside the fab at utility scale and then distribute in.โ
The company is aiming to produce its first silicon wafers by 2028 and have its first commercial system online by 2029.
There are, naturally, hurdles, though right now, competing with ASML directly does not appear to be one of them. โWeโre working very closely with them right now to basically design how we integrate with an ASML scanner,โ Kelez said. โSo weโre working with both them, as well as their providers, [like] Zeiss, who does their optics.โ
When asked whether Intel or other major chipmakers have committed to purchasing xLightโs technology, Gelsinger said they have not. โNobody has committed yet, but the work is going on with everybody on the list that you would expect, and weโre having intense conversations with all of them.โ
Meanwhile, the competitive landscape is heating up. In October, Substrate โ a semiconductor manufacturing startup backed by Peter Thiel โ announced it raised $100 million to develop U.S. chip fabs, including an EUV tool that sounds awfully similar to xLightโs approach. Gelsinger doesnโt see them as direct competition though. โIf Substrate is successful, they could be a customer for us,โ he said, offering that Substrate is focused on building a full-stack lithography scanner that would ultimately need a free electron laser, which is exactly what xLight is developing.
Gelsingerโs relationship with the Trump administration adds another layer to the story. He brought up xLight to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick back in February, before Playground funded the startup and before Lutnick was confirmed, pitching it as a company that could help bring chip manufacturing back to the U.S.
The arrangement has drawn criticism from some who view the administrationโs approach as state capitalism, with the government picking winners and losers. But Gelsinger is unapologetic, framing it as necessary for national competitiveness. โI measure it by the results,โ he said. โDoes it drive the results that we want and that we need to reinvigorate our industrial policies? Many of our competitive countries donโt have such debates. Theyโre moving forward with the policies that are necessary to accomplish their competitive outcomes.โ
He pointed to energy policy as another example. โHow many nuclear reactors are being built in the US today? Zero. How many being built in China today? 39. Energy policy in a digital AI economy equals the economic capacity of the nation.โ

For xLight, the government stake comes with minimal strings attached. The Commerce Department wonโt have veto rights or a board seat, says Kelez (pictured above, with Gelsinger). โNo information rights, nothing,โ Gelsinger adds. โItโs a minority investment, in a non-governing way, but it also says we need this company to succeed for national interest.โ
xLight has raised $40 million from investors including Playground Global and is planning another fundraising round in January. Unlike fusion or quantum computing startups that need billions, Kelez said xLightโs path is more manageable. โThis is not fusion or quantum,โ he said. โWe donโt need billions.โ
The company also signed a letter of intent with New York to build its first machine at the New York CREATE site near Albany, though that agreement also needs finalization.
For Gelsinger, xLight is clearly more than just another portfolio company. Itโs a chance to cement his relevance in the semiconductor industry that he helped build, even if his methods put him at odds with Silicon Valleyโs traditional ethos.
Asked about navigating his principles in the current political environment, Gelsinger retreated to a more technocratic view of corporate leadership โ one where the money is from the U.S. government, administrations are temporary, and CEOs must remain above the fray.
โCEOs and companies should neither be Republican or Democrat,โ he said. โYour job is to accomplish the business objective, serve your investors, serve your shareholders. That is your objective. And as a result, you need to be able to figure out what policies are beneficial on the R side or what policies are beneficial in the D side, and be able to navigate through them.โ
He added separately of that $150 million from the Trump administration, โTaxpayers will do well.โ
When asked if working across 10 startups is enough for someone who used to run Intel, Gelsinger was emphatic. โAbsolutely. The idea that I can now influence across such a wide range of technologies โ Iโm a deep tech guy at the core of who I am. My mind is so stretched here, and Iโm just grateful that the Playground team would have me to join them and let me make them smarter and be a rookie venture capitalist.โ
He paused, then added with a grin: โAnd I gave my wife back her weekends.โ
Itโs a nice thought, though anyone who knows Gelsingerโs reputation as a workaholic might wonder how long that arrangement will last.


