In the strategic game of AI development, DeepSeek is not just trying to win; it’s trying to change the rules of the game itself. The launch of the V3.2-Exp model is a move that looks beyond the simple checkmate of competitors and aims to create a new board where its unique strengths give it a permanent advantage.
The old game was often about who could build the biggest model, a contest of resources. DeepSeek’s new game, defined by its DeepSeek Sparse Attention architecture, is about who can build the most efficient model. It’s a shift from a game of strength to a game of intelligence.
The 50% price cut is a key move in this new game. It financially rewards players (customers) who choose to play by DeepSeek’s rules, attracting them to its side of the board and leaving rivals like OpenAI and Alibaba to play an older, more expensive version of the game.
By introducing this new paradigm with an “intermediate” piece, DeepSeek is teaching the market the rules of its new game before deploying its queen—the full next-generation architecture. It’s a brilliant way to prepare the field for its ultimate strategic objective.
This is more than just competition; it’s a fundamental reimagining of what it means to win in the AI space. DeepSeek is betting that the future belongs not to the player with the most pieces, but to the one who can invent a more elegant and efficient game.
Beyond the Checkmate: DeepSeek’s AI Strategy is a New Game
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