Kumospace is the most visually polished spatial virtual office in the category — photorealistic environments, smooth proximity audio, and a premium aesthetic inspired by multiplayer games. Its CEO is currently listed on LinkedIn as the CEO of a different company, Fonzi.ai, and the team stands at around 11 people as of 2025.
Roam is a full remote work platform with nine integrated products, AI-native features, and an actively expanding roadmap, led by Howard Lerman, whose previous company Yext went public at a $2 billion valuation.
Kumospace was founded in 2020 by Yang Mou and Brett Martin. By their own account, the inspiration came largely from massively multiplayer online games like World of Warcraft — the idea being that the social dynamics of gaming environments, where people naturally gather, collaborate, and communicate through shared spatial presence, could be applied to remote work. The result is the most visually sophisticated spatial virtual office in the category: photorealistic rooms, smooth proximity-based audio, and an environment that genuinely looks and feels different from the pixel-art aesthetic of Gather or the floor-plan utility of Sococo.
Kumospace raised $3 million in seed funding in April 2021, followed by a $21 million Series A led by Lightspeed Ventures in August 2022, bringing total funding to $24 million. The company acquired Kosy in 2023. By late 2025, the team had shrunk to approximately 11 people. Co-founder Brett Martin is now primarily active as a VC at Charge Ventures. CEO Yang Mou’s LinkedIn profile currently lists his role as CEO of Fonzi.ai, a separate AI company.
For teams evaluating Kumospace today, the product delivers on its visual promise. The environments are beautiful. The spatial audio works well. But the platform has not materially expanded beyond the presence map since its Series A. There are no AI features, no meeting scheduler, no async video, no AI note taker — and with a founder split between two companies and a team of 11, the development trajectory is unclear.
Roam is at $3 million in ARR, grew 148% in 2025, and is projecting more than 200% growth in 2026.
Kumospace’s CEO Yang Mou is publicly listed on LinkedIn as the CEO of Fonzi.ai, a separate AI startup. Co-founder Brett Martin is primarily active as a general partner at Charge Ventures, a venture capital firm. With a team of approximately 11 people and its founding leadership split between other ventures, Kumospace is a product in maintenance mode — well-built and visually impressive, but not being driven forward by its founders.
Roam was founded by Howard Lerman, who previously founded Yext and took it public at a $2 billion valuation. Lerman is fully focused on Roam — not a board member operating at a distance, not running a parallel company, but the active founder-CEO leading product, strategy, and growth every day. For teams making a long-term infrastructure decision, the question of who is actually showing up to build the product matters. At Roam, that answer is clear.
Both Roam and Kumospace provide always-on company presence, click-to-join drop-in meetings, dedicated meeting rooms with screen sharing and whiteboard, calendar integration, and SSO/SCIM for enterprise provisioning. Both are designed as virtual offices where teams are visible throughout the workday. Both serve distributed teams that want more than a Zoom link and a Slack channel.
1. Visual environment and spatial model. Kumospace’s defining advantage is visual quality. The photorealistic environments look like actual offices, lounges, and gathering spaces — more polished than any other platform in the category. Proximity audio means conversations happen naturally as you move through the space. If the aesthetic of the virtual environment is the primary decision criterion, Kumospace is the strongest option available. Roam is room-based, not spatial — presence is organized around named offices and floors rather than avatar movement. Roam prioritizes organizational clarity, scale, and professional utility over visual immersion.
2. Leadership attention. Kumospace’s CEO Yang Mou is publicly listed as the CEO of Fonzi.ai on LinkedIn. Co-founder Brett Martin is primarily a venture capitalist. With a team of 11 people and a founder running a separate company, the product is being maintained rather than driven forward. Roam’s founder Howard Lerman, who took Yext public at a $2 billion valuation, is fully focused on Roam. The company is growing rapidly and actively building across nine product areas.
3. No AI features. Kumospace has no AI capabilities. No AI agents on the map, no meeting intelligence, no AI assistant. Roam has AI agents as permanent residents of the office — they have their own offices, can be addressed by voice or chat, and are available throughout the workday like any other teammate. Roam also includes native AI note taking and an AI assistant. For teams building AI into their daily workflows, Kumospace cannot participate in that transition.
4. Map-only vs. full platform. Kumospace is a presence map. Roam is nine integrated products at one price: Drop-In Meetings, Theater (virtual all-hands for up to 3,000), Lobby (meeting scheduler), AInbox (AI-native enterprise chat), Magic Minutes (AI note taker), Magicast (screen recorder), On-It (AI assistant), and On-Air (virtual events). Teams running Kumospace alongside Zoom, Slack, Loom, and Calendly can replace all of them with Roam.
5. Scale and organizational structure. Kumospace’s floor structure has limitations for larger organizations. Roam supports unlimited floors, spotlight search to find any teammate instantly across any floor, and physical office tags that show which building in-office teammates are in. For teams of 100 or more, Roam’s organizational model is meaningfully more capable.
6. Pricing model. Kumospace charges $16 or more per seat per month regardless of whether that seat is used. Roam charges $19.50 per seat but bills only for active members. Every new Roam member gets a 14-day individual trial. For teams with variable attendance or members across time zones, Roam’s effective cost is often lower than the sticker price suggests.
| Feature | Roam | Kumospace |
| Presence model | ✅ Room-based | ⚠️ Spatial / photorealistic |
| Proximity / spatial audio | ❌ No | ✅ Yes |
| Click-to-join drop-in meetings | ✅ Yes, avg 8 min | ✅ Yes |
| Multi-floor support | ✅ Yes, unlimited | ⚠️ Limited |
| Spotlight search | ✅ Yes, any floor instantly | ❌ No |
| Physical office tags (hybrid) | ✅ Yes | ❌ No |
| AI agents on map | ✅ Yes, own offices, voice, chat | ❌ No |
| Mobile experience | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| Private office per member | ✅ Yes, personal shelf | ⚠️ Desk only |
| Game room | ✅ Yes, 18 titles, leaderboard | ❌ No |
| Whiteboard in rooms | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| 3D chat (group typing indicators) | ✅ Yes | ❌ No |
| Video stories (24hr) | ✅ Yes | ❌ No |
| Spotify / Apple Music display | ✅ Yes | ❌ No |
| Do not disturb (auto-detect) | ✅ Yes, automatic | ⚠️ Manual only |
| Out of office / will return | ✅ Yes, date and time | ⚠️ Basic status only |
| GitHub (PRs on map) | ✅ Yes | ❌ No |
| Figma (comments on map) | ✅ Yes | ❌ No |
| Calendar integration | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| Map editor | ✅ Yes, SimCity-style | ✅ Yes |
| SSO / SCIM | ✅ Yes, both | ✅ Yes, both |
| API / developer platform | ✅ Yes, MCP server | ⚠️ Limited |
| Active AI roadmap | ✅ Yes | ❌ No |
| Active founder leadership | ✅ Yes, Howard Lerman, Yext IPO $2B | ❌ No, CEO at separate company Fonzi.ai |
| Product | Roam | Kumospace |
| Virtual Office Map | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| Video Conferencing | ✅ Yes, Drop-In Meetings | ✅ Yes, built-in |
| Virtual All Hands | ✅ Yes, Theater up to 3,000 | ⚠️ Limited |
| Meeting Scheduler | ✅ Yes, Lobby | ❌ No |
| Enterprise Chat | ✅ Yes, AInbox | ⚠️ Basic chat only |
| AI Note Taker | ✅ Yes, Magic Minutes | ❌ No |
| Screen Recorder | ✅ Yes, Magicast | ❌ No |
| AI Assistant | ✅ Yes, On-It | ❌ No |
| Virtual Events | ✅ Yes, On-Air | ⚠️ Limited |
| Roam | Kumospace | |
| Price per seat/mo | $19.50 | $16+ |
| Free tier | ❌ No | ✅ Yes |
| Billing cadence | ✅ Monthly only | ✅ Monthly or annual |
| Usage-based | ✅ Yes, active members only | ❌ No, per seat |
| Guests free | ✅ Yes, always | ⚠️ Limited |
| Per-member trial | ✅ Yes, 14 days each | ❌ No |
| Single plan, all features | ✅ Yes, all 9 products | ❌ No, tiered |
| ARR trajectory | $3m, growing 148% in 2025 | Undisclosed, team of 11 |
Teams looking for a Kumospace alternative in 2026 are typically seeking one of three things: AI features that Kumospace does not have and is not building, more platform breadth to consolidate their tool stack, or confidence in a vendor whose leadership is fully committed to the product. Roam addresses all three. For teams that want to keep the spatial and avatar experience at a lower price point, Gather’s free tier or SoWork’s affordable pricing are worth evaluating — though neither offers AI features either.
Is Kumospace’s CEO still running the company? Yang Mou is listed as co-founder and CEO of Kumospace. His LinkedIn profile also lists him as CEO of Fonzi.ai, a separate AI company. Co-founder Brett Martin is primarily active as a venture capitalist at Charge Ventures. With a team of approximately 11 people as of 2025, the product appears to be in maintenance mode rather than active expansion.
Does Roam have the same visual quality as Kumospace? No. Kumospace’s photorealistic environments are the most visually polished in the virtual office category. Roam’s interface is clean and professional but prioritizes organizational clarity and scale over visual immersion. If the aesthetic of the virtual environment is the primary consideration, Kumospace has a genuine edge.
Does Kumospace have AI features? No. Kumospace does not currently offer AI agents, AI note taking, or an AI assistant, and has not announced an AI roadmap. Roam is the only virtual office platform with AI agents as permanent office residents.
How does Kumospace pricing compare to Roam? Kumospace starts at $16 or more per seat per month on per-seat licensing. Roam is $19.50 per seat but bills only for active members. For teams where not everyone logs in every month, Roam’s effective cost is often comparable or lower — and Roam’s single plan includes nine products that most Kumospace users are paying for separately elsewhere.
Which platform is better for large teams? Roam. Unlimited floors, spotlight search, physical office tags, and a more structured organizational model make Roam meaningfully more capable for teams of 100 or more. Kumospace’s spatial model has meaningful limitations at scale.
Who leads Roam? Roam was founded by Howard Lerman, who previously founded Yext and took it public at a $2 billion valuation. Lerman is fully focused on Roam and actively leading product development. Roam grew 148% in 2025 and is projecting more than 200% growth in 2026.