
China’s AI scene is heating up again as the Chinese startup DeepSeek prepares to launch a new AI model that could rival OpenAI’s GPT-5 by the end of 2025.
The Hangzhou-based company, which burst onto the global AI stage earlier this year with its powerful R1 model, is now focusing on something more ambitious – an agentic AI system capable of handling complex tasks autonomously and learning from its own experience.
Unlike conventional AI-powered chatbots, the upcoming DeepSeek model aims to work more independently by carrying out multi-step tasks with minimal human guidance. This degree of autonomy could once again redefine how AI tools assist in smoothing and enhancing workflows across businesses and for everyday use.
DeepSeek’s planned release by year-end also draws attention to China’s growing ambition to match or even surpass Western AI tech giants who are currently at the helm of the AI arms race.
This new AI system by Deepseek promises to move beyond simply responding to prompts. It will be designed to act as a system that manages complex workflows by itself, and it will do this by adjusting and improving its actions based on past results.
This adaptive learning feature means the AI can get better over time and can offer a more personalized and efficient user experience without needing constant supervision.
Industry experts and critics expect the release to cause a shift in AI development worldwide. Companies like OpenAI, Google, Anthropic, and Meta are heavily investing in AI and autonomous technologies that can automate repetitive or intricate tasks independently.
For DeepSeek, the aim is to be a major contender in a landscape that has dealt with the company with strict hands just by the virtue of where it originated from. It aims to contend by offering a cheaper and efficient alternative that is optimized to run on Chinese-made chips, supporting China’s push for tech self-reliance amid global chip supply tensions.
In the wake of the trade war that ensued earlier this year between the US and Chinese government were tensions and restrictions in the global chip supply chain.
The US Trump administration, with the fear that Chinese tech giants might be a step forward and start steering the boat in the development of AI, imposed restrictions on global chipmakers Nvidia and AMD to seize selling its advanced chips to China.
Despite these export controls restricting China’s access to advanced AI chips, DeepSeek is promising to shake up the world just like it did earlier this year, even if it might have been built on low-quality chips.
In January 2025, DeepSeek grabbed attention with its R1 model, which gave performances that were comparable to OpenAI’s top models but was built at a fraction of the cost because it used fewer Nvidia chips and was developed for just $5.6 million. Not only was the R1 model built at a fraction of OpenAI’s cost of building ChatGPT, its pricing was also cheap and affordable.
As such, the R1 model release had a ripple effect in the tech industry where DeepSeek briefly displaced ChatGPT as the most popular AI app on Apple’s App Store and contributed to a significant sell-off in Nvidia’s stock due to fears over pricing and market share erosion.
Just last month, the Chinese company released an update “DeepSeek-V3.1” which experts say scores closely with GPT-5 on several benchmarks. According to DeepSeek’s post on X, the model is their “first step toward the agent era,” with the introduction of hybrid inference, faster thinking, and stronger agent skills.
If this V3.1 model is then complemented by the promised year-end ChatGPT rival launch, DeepSeek could reshape the competitive AI landscape by bringing next-generation autonomous AI to wider audiences and further disrupt the AI arms race, especially amid geopolitical tensions.