Moore Threads is China’s answer to NVIDIA and AMD, built by a former NVIDIA China exec who decided Beijing needed its own GPU champion. Instead of flying rainbow flags or putting DEI committees on the payroll, Moore Threads is focused on one thing: building graphics cards that actually work. Their chips run on their homegrown “MUSA” architecture, which supports DirectX, Vulkan, and OpenGL. Proof that you can sell GPUs without packaging them in identity politics.

The company pushes into gaming, AI, and workstation markets with a pitch that is all about technology, not ideology. No Pride Month graphics card drops, no ESG reports, and no lectures about climate equity. Just silicon, benchmarks, and a lot of national pride on the Chinese side.

Woke Agendas Avoided

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Liberal Companies To Avoid

Done bankrolling the woke circus? Steer clear of these companies that prioritize hashtags and virtue signaling over their customers. They’re more interested in preaching than delivering products you actually want.

Liberal Companies To Avoid

Done bankrolling the woke circus? Steer clear of these companies that prioritize hashtags and virtue signaling over their customers. They’re more interested in preaching than delivering products you actually want.

Disclaimer

Moore Threads is a China-based company headquartered in Beijing. Its products are primarily sold in Chinese and Asian markets, with little international distribution. The company was added to the U.S. Entity List in 2023, which restricts its access to Western technology and partnerships. While Moore Threads appears to avoid the woke marketing playbook, it is still constrained by its geography and political system. If you are outside of China, getting your hands on one of their GPUs may be difficult, and like any hardware company, it still depends on global supply chains that trace back to larger, often woke-leaning corporations.