Deep Research · AES 2026 Sponsor Bio

ForgeFX AES Bio Cited Research Report

Research goal: give ForgeBot enough context to write or critique ForgeFX’s Augmented Enterprise Summit sponsor bio without overclaiming, flattening the meaning, or sounding like a generic artificial-intelligence vendor.

1,200+AES attendee scale reported by BrainXchange / AES.
75%+AES sponsor guide says enterprise end users make up over three quarters of the audience.
20+ yrsForgeFX credibility belongs to simulation-based training and game-engine delivery, not artificial intelligence history.

Executive Finding

The bio should position ForgeFX as a builder of high-fidelity training simulations for enterprise operations, with artificial intelligence as a current capability layer — not as the center of the company story.

Recommended guardrail: “For more than two decades, ForgeFX has built high-fidelity training systems powered by modern game engines. Today, these systems can combine advanced physics, digital-twin technologies, AI subject matter guidance, and realistic machines and environments.”

That sequence preserves the timeline: the durable claim is the company’s long simulation/game-engine history; the newer claim is that modern systems can include artificial-intelligence guidance.

External Results

1. AES is a practical enterprise adoption forum, not a futurist expo.

AES describes the 2026 event as where enterprises move artificial intelligence, extended reality, and digital twins from pilots into operations. Its own positioning emphasizes deployment, integration, security, training, change management, and return on investment. That matters because ForgeFX copy should speak to operational readiness, risk reduction, scaling, and practical training outcomes.

Sources: BrainXchange AES 2026 event page; AES “Why Attend” page.

2. The sponsor audience is unusually buyer-heavy.

The sponsor guide says AES gives sponsors access to Fortune 1000 decision makers and that enterprise end users are more than 75% of the audience. It also highlights hands-on demos, curated expo interaction, and buyers asking “the right questions.” The bio therefore has to be clear enough for decision makers and concrete enough for practitioners.

Source: AES sponsor and exhibitor guide.

3. AES topics overlap directly with ForgeFX strengths.

AES themes include training, safety, field service, work instructions, digital twins, three-dimensional content pipelines, data visualization, artificial intelligence, and extended reality/spatial computing. ForgeFX should not sound adjacent to the conference; it should sound native to the conference’s actual buyer problems.

Sources: AES home page; AES “Why Attend” page.

4. Comparable vendors are leaning heavily into artificial-intelligence-forward language.

SimInsights leads with “Agentic AI Powered Immersive Training Platform.” CGS Immersive emphasizes artificial-intelligence-driven simulations, coaching, extended reality, measurable performance, and workforce transformation. ForgeFX can use AI language, but its differentiator is not generic AI hype; it is custom high-fidelity simulation of real equipment, procedures, environments, and failure modes.

Sources: SimInsights; CGS Immersive.

Internal Results

1. ForgeFX’s public positioning is still training-simulation-first.

The ForgeFX home page describes the company as a three-dimensional training simulation software development company. It emphasizes custom virtual and augmented reality application development, interactive three-dimensional training, hands-on lifelike experience, reduced cost, reduced risk, and improved skill mastery.

Source: ForgeFX home page.

2. The technology page supports a stronger, more specific bio.

ForgeFX’s simulation technology page says the company builds on proven game engines and extended-reality frameworks, supports deployment across Windows, iOS, Android, WebGL, visionOS, and extended-reality devices, and can integrate original-equipment-manufacturer controls, multiuser collaboration, analytics, coaching systems, and artificial-intelligence-enabled voice and knowledge guidance where useful.

Source: ForgeFX simulation technology page.

3. The strongest conference-safe artificial-intelligence phrase is “AI subject matter guidance.”

In the source Slack thread, Kris correctly flagged that the first ForgeBot revision made it sound like ForgeFX had been using artificial intelligence for two decades. The corrected wording separated the two-decade game-engine claim from the current AI-capability claim. “AI subject matter guidance” avoids implying that artificial intelligence replaces human subject matter experts.

Source: ForgeFX Slack thread C0AKEQ2NB26 / 1783101847.676779.

4. Existing internal sales language maps well to AES buyer concerns.

In a General Motors discovery call, Greg described ForgeFX as using video-game engine technology and methodology to produce training simulators, allowing learners to make mistakes in the virtual world before making them in the real world. He emphasized equipment and procedure digitization, digital twins, spatial computing, step-by-step guidance, standardized training, reduced travel, reduced consumables, reduced wear and tear, and safety-risk reduction.

Source: internal GM discovery transcript, 2026-04-27, stored in ForgeSales project materials.

Messaging Guardrails

IssueSafer ruleReason
AI timelinePut “for more than two decades” next to game engines / simulation-based training only.Avoids implying a 20-year AI history.
AI roleUse “AI subject matter guidance” or “AI-guided subject matter support.”Signals coaching/support without replacing experts.
Digital twinsSay “digital-twin technologies” or “digital models of equipment and procedures.”Broad enough for sponsor copy; avoids implying every system is a live-data twin.
PhotorealismPrefer “realistic” unless the specific project demands “photorealistic.”More defensible and less sales-heavy.
AudienceLead with enterprise training, safety, scale, and operational readiness.Matches AES buyer motivations.

Paste-Ready Direction

For AES, the best bio structure is:

  1. Who ForgeFX helps: enterprise, defense, and industrial organizations training people around complex equipment, procedures, and operations.
  2. What ForgeFX builds: immersive three-dimensional simulation and spatial-computing training systems.
  3. Why ForgeFX is credible: more than two decades of game-engine training simulation work.
  4. What modern systems can include: advanced physics, digital-twin technologies, AI subject matter guidance, realistic machines and environments, analytics, and multi-device deployment.
  5. Why buyers care: safer practice, lower cost, less equipment wear, reduced instructor load, consistency, engagement, retention, confidence, and better decision-making.

Confidence and Caveats

High confidence AES audience/context, ForgeFX simulation positioning, artificial-intelligence wording guardrail.

Medium confidence exact sponsor-directory length and format, because the sponsor guide requires form download for full package details.

Caveat Do not use internal client names, performance metrics, or transcript quotes in public sponsor copy unless Gen/Greg/Adam explicitly approve them for external use.

Source List

Prepared by ForgeBot for Adam Kane. Hosted on preview.forgefx.dev as an unlisted ForgeFX working artifact.