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Phillips knew equity was dead. No VC would touch a hardware-heavy, low-margin business in a recession. So he turned to a forgotten corner of finance: and vendor financing .

At its peak, DVDPlay operated approximately across the United States and Canada, with a particularly strong presence in California. Acquisition and Legacy

By 2008, the financial crisis was freezing VC wallets. Redbox, backed by McDonald’s real estate and Coinstar’s cash flow, dropped rental prices to for a limited time. DVDPlay’s average revenue per kiosk fell from $1,100/month to $600/month.

: The acquisition helped NCR scale quickly to compete with Redbox, which at the time held a massive lead with over 20,000 kiosks.

$34.7 million in venture capital before being acquired in 2009. PitchBook +1 Funding Overview DVDPlay’s capital history was marked by steady investment from prominent venture capital firms during the peak of the physical media rental era: Total Funding: ~$34.7 million. Key Funding Rounds: Series A (2003): Raised $4.3 million. Venture Round (2006): Secured $20 million to fuel aggressive expansion in major retail markets like California. Later Stage VC (2007): Continued growth funding as it scaled its network to roughly 1,300 kiosks. Startup Ranking +3 Notable Investors The company was backed by a syndicate of eight investors, including PitchBook : El Dorado Ventures Emergence Capital Partners Palo Alto Venture Partners Vanguard Ventures BlackHawk Capital Management Venture Capital Journal +5 The 2009 Exit In December 2009,

Dvdplay Funding Jun 2026

Phillips knew equity was dead. No VC would touch a hardware-heavy, low-margin business in a recession. So he turned to a forgotten corner of finance: and vendor financing .

At its peak, DVDPlay operated approximately across the United States and Canada, with a particularly strong presence in California. Acquisition and Legacy dvdplay funding

By 2008, the financial crisis was freezing VC wallets. Redbox, backed by McDonald’s real estate and Coinstar’s cash flow, dropped rental prices to for a limited time. DVDPlay’s average revenue per kiosk fell from $1,100/month to $600/month. Phillips knew equity was dead

: The acquisition helped NCR scale quickly to compete with Redbox, which at the time held a massive lead with over 20,000 kiosks. At its peak, DVDPlay operated approximately across the

$34.7 million in venture capital before being acquired in 2009. PitchBook +1 Funding Overview DVDPlay’s capital history was marked by steady investment from prominent venture capital firms during the peak of the physical media rental era: Total Funding: ~$34.7 million. Key Funding Rounds: Series A (2003): Raised $4.3 million. Venture Round (2006): Secured $20 million to fuel aggressive expansion in major retail markets like California. Later Stage VC (2007): Continued growth funding as it scaled its network to roughly 1,300 kiosks. Startup Ranking +3 Notable Investors The company was backed by a syndicate of eight investors, including PitchBook : El Dorado Ventures Emergence Capital Partners Palo Alto Venture Partners Vanguard Ventures BlackHawk Capital Management Venture Capital Journal +5 The 2009 Exit In December 2009,

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