Thanks to everyone who made this year’s San Francisco event what it was — and to the 10,000 of you who filled the halls, made the connections, and left with more than you came with. Couldn’t make it? The images below tell part of the story. Until next year.
Vinod Khosla doesn’t buy the argument that powering AI will doom climate efforts. Geothermal energy is nearly here, he said, while fusion remains further out. He also touched on his alignment with Trump (deregulation) and his disagreement (immigration): “The only thing I will say is this administration won’t last forever,” he said with a grin.

That’s Roelof Botha on the stage, and that’s the crowd that came to hang on his every word. The Sequoia partner talked through how his firm picks winners, what government ownership in startups could mean, and warned founders not to get cute with timing, telling them to raise now if they’ll need money six months from now. Bubbles pop.

Kevin Damoa of Glīd Technologies, winner of this year’s Battlefield competition, with Battlefield chief Isabelle Johannessen. She and TC’s Michael Schick work with many dozens of startups for months to prepare them for this stage. The hug is earned.

Roy Lee, the founder of Cluely, the app best known for its mantra “cheat at everything,” entertains the crowd with his f-bomb-laden take on how to win at marketing. “Every day, people are doing crazier and crazier things, which is why to stand out, you have to do something even crazier.” (Pictured left, Maxwell Zeff, holding his own.)

If former Cleveland Cavalier Tristan Thompson misses the NBA, he’s not showing it. He’s building a business empire and raising pointed questions about the league he left behind. When asked about whether players could manipulate Basketball Fun — a web3 platform that turns NBA players into tradable tokens — he offered a counterpoint: “It’s the same question we ask about referees. Are they not gaming the system?“ When moderator Rebecca Bellan pressed whether he meant NBA referees take bribes, Thompson shrugged. “It’s just a question to be asked.”

Our own Sean O’Kane shares a moment with Wayve co-founder and CEO, Alex Kendall. Kendall may also be smiling because his U.K.-based self-driving startup — whose software acts as “brains for cars” — is in talks to raise a fresh $2 billion from SoftBank and Microsoft at an $8 billion valuation.
TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 is live!
Join Google Cloud, Netflix, Microsoft, Box, Phia, a16z, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Hugging Face, Elad Gil, Vinod Khosla — some of the 250+ heavy hitters leading 200+ sessions designed to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. And don’t miss 300+ showcasing startups in all sectors.
Register now and save 50% on your pass.
TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 is live
Join Google Cloud, Netflix, Microsoft, Box, Phia, a16z, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Hugging Face, Elad Gil, Vinod Khosla — some of the 250+ heavy hitters leading 200+ sessions designed to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. And don’t miss 300+ showcasing startups in all sectors.
Register now and save 50% on your pass.
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October 27-29, 2025

Phoebe Gates and Sophia Kianni, founders of the AI-powered shopping assistant Phia, dazzled the audience at TechCrunch with their enthusiasm for making high-quality, secondhand clothing a lot easier to find. Gates, daughter of Bill and Melinda, was also sporting when asked by moderator Amanda Silberling what her famous parents have learned from her. Said Gates with a laugh, “Hopefully style! I don’t even consider myself that stylish; I just like building in the consumer space, but now I get random emails from my family, asking, ‘Should I wear this to this?’”

Waymo co-CEO Tekedra Mawakana with TechCrunch’s Kirsten Korosec, fielding questions about autonomous vehicles, including whether society will accept deaths caused by self-driving cars. “I think that society will,” Mawakana said. “The challenge is making sure society has a high enough bar on safety that companies are held to.”

Kevin Rose talking Digg’s reboot and the future of venture capital (Rose is also a general partner at the early-stage venture firm True Ventures). I’m smiling because that’s what you do when someone won’t answer your questions about a buzzy, wearable startup that’s still in stealth. (We’ll have more on Sandbar soon.)

Hugging Face co-founder Thomas Wolf hydrating between questions about building the future of AI, including as it relates to LeRobot, the Hugging Face project that’s trying to democratize robotics with affordable hardware, open-source tools, and shared datasets.

Finals judges Marlon Nichols of MaC VC and Aileen Lee of Cowboy Ventures during the last stages of our highly competitive Startup Battlefield. Somewhere off-camera, a founder is sweating through their pitch deck.

Aaron Levie of Box in conversation with TC’s Russell Brandom. Levie has graced the Disrupt stage numerous times over TC’s 20 years at the center of the startup ecosystem, and he always brings it.

Netflix CTO Elizabeth Stone on the streamer’s expanded remit from simple binge-watching to interactive programming (think voting on live shows and gaming via your phone): “It hasn’t changed the way we tell stories,” she told a rapt crowd.

TC’s Dominic-Madori Davis talking community building with Tage Oyerinde of Campus, who’s rethinking community college, and Teddy Solomon of Fizz, the anonymous social app that’s spreading across college campuses and occasionally getting banned, which some might view as a badge of honor.

A whiteboard of wants: developers needed, contacts offered, deals proposed. We love it when founders lean into old-school tactics. (Some still work!)

David George, who leads the growth investing team at Andreessen Horowitz, came to the show to talk with Julie Bort about what startups need to weigh as they’re eyeing the public market. It was his birthday, as it turns out; the crowd takes a moment here to celebrate it with him.

San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie on his call with President Trump about sending the National Guard to the city — a proposal floated by Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff. “What I said to him was what I say to everybody: this is a city on the rise,” Lurie said. “Three days of Disrupt here should prove that.” On whether he made concessions with the deal-making Trump, he was definitive. “No, absolutely not. No ask.”

Post-show elation from TC’s Jessica Barrera, who handled ticketing for 10,000 attendees. She saves our bacon routinely.

For many more photos from the event, visit our Flickr stream.
You can also find our full video coverage: here is Day 1, Day 2, and Day 3.
Original Source: https://techcrunch.com/2025/10/30/scenes-from-techcrunch-disrupt/
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