Updated
Updated · Space.com · May 21
Lunar Outpost Secures $30 Million for Pegasus Rover as It Targets 2028 Moon Launch
Updated
Updated · Space.com · May 21

Lunar Outpost Secures $30 Million for Pegasus Rover as It Targets 2028 Moon Launch

2 articles · Updated · Space.com · May 21
  • $30 million in new funding will help Lunar Outpost develop Pegasus, a smaller lunar rover the company aims to deliver by end-2027 and launch to the moon in 2028.
  • Pegasus is designed as a leaner counterpart to the company's larger Eagle rover, fitting Lunar Outpost's broader plan to field autonomous machines that build and maintain lunar infrastructure.
  • Michael Moreno said those robots are intended to support tasks such as surface improvement, landing-pad construction, energy storage and habitat work for a sustained human presence on the moon.
  • Lunar Outpost already has more moon rovers assigned to missions than all other commercial companies combined, with four more MAPP mini-rover missions in development after its first mission was lost when Intuitive Machines' Athena lander tipped over in 2025.
  • NASA's lunar terrain vehicle contracts are worth up to $4.6 billion through 2039, and Lunar Outpost expects one MAPP rover to work alongside an Artemis 4 astronaut in what it says would be a first.
With past lander failures, can private companies truly build a reliable robotic workforce on the Moon before 2030?
As companies race to mine the Moon, who will write the rules to prevent a cosmic gold rush?
Beyond building infrastructure, can lunar regolith truly be transformed to grow food for a permanent Moon base?