Singapore-based BitCyber has been appointed regional distributor for Gambit Cyber’s flagship KnightGuard platform across Singapore, ASEAN and Hong Kong, in a partnership aimed at enterprises grappling with an emerging era of AI-versus-AI security operations.
Under the agreement, announced on Monday, BitCyber will lead enterprise sales, channel development and go-to-market execution across the region, with an initial focus on financial services, healthcare, critical infrastructure and technology, expanding through 2026. Gambit Cyber, a Netherlands-headquartered specialist in AI-native, risk-centric Continuous Threat Exposure Management (CTEM), is also establishing a dedicated Singapore-based tenancy for the ASEAN region.
From alert fatigue to risk quantification
The partnership targets a familiar pain point for security leaders: too many alerts and too little clarity on what actually threatens the business. KnightGuard uses AI-native automation and built-in cyber risk quantification to identify, prioritise and validate exposures based on real-world exploitability, with the aim of cutting time spent triaging false positives.
The companies frame this as a shift away from reactive, alert-heavy security operations towards an automated, threat-informed and outcome-driven model — one that draws on a coordinated network of autonomous agentic skills within the platform to monitor threats, analyse data and orchestrate workflows.
“Security leaders don’t need more alerts — they need to know what’s actually putting the business at risk and by how much. KnightGuard’s unified cyber risk quantification gives CISOs exactly that: a continuous, validated picture of real exposure translated into business impact. That’s a fundamentally different conversation, and we’re proud to be bringing it to enterprise and government clients across the region,” said Philip Ng, Co-founder and CEO of BitCyber.
A regional play on data sovereignty
The local tenancy is pitched as a long-term commitment to the region, intended to support data sovereignty, regulatory alignment and localised operations for enterprise and government customers — considerations that increasingly shape security procurement across Southeast Asia.
Gambit Cyber co-founders Anuj and Manuj Kumar said attackers are automating faster than traditional security operations can respond, and that the BitCyber partnership would help build a regional ecosystem for continuous, AI-native exposure management. BitCyber, licensed by the Cyber Security Agency of Singapore, holds enterprise and government relationships across ASEAN and Hong Kong. Gambit Cyber is backed by investors including Expeditions Fund and Bitdefender Voyager Ventures.

