A reclusive Chinese billionaire has allegedly spent years using American surrogacy agencies to mass-produce children, more than 100 so far, in a bizarre quest to build a global dynasty.
Xu Bo, 48, reportedly aims to ultimately intermarry his heirs with those of Elon Musk.
The wealthy founder of the online gaming company Duoyi reportedly calls himself “China’s first father.”
He has openly stated he intends to produce at least “50 high-quality sons,” according to social-media posts verified by the Wall Street Journal.
Duoyi has publicly claimed Xu has already fathered more than 100 U.S.-born children through surrogates.
However, the real number may be far higher.
The story exploded across Chinese social media after Xu’s ex-girlfriend, Tang Jing, alleged he had fathered more than 300 children, including 11 she said she raised for years.
“That number might even be undercounted, but it’s certainly not exaggerated,” Tang wrote in a November 15 post.
Xu has not disputed her claims about his staggering number of offspring.
Instead, the two are engaged in a custody battle over their two daughters, with Xu demanding millions of dollars he claims he spent on Tang over the years.
A video posted in 2022 by an account tied to Xu paints a chilling picture of the scale of his efforts.
The footage shows dozens of young boys sitting in rows inside a mansion.
When the cameraman walks in, the children leap from their seats, rushing toward him and shouting “Daddy!”
“Imagine a bunch of babies rushing towards you—how does that feel?” the caption reads.
“Take a look. Besides your loved one, what’s cuter than children?”
A spokesperson for Duoyi told the Journal that “much of what you described is untrue.”
But they refused to specify which parts.
A Musk-Inspired Dynasty Project
Xu’s obsession with building a sprawling biological empire reportedly stems from his fixation on Tesla CEO Elon Musk.
The billionaire tech mogul has denied claims he has been offering sperm to friends to boost birthrates.
Nevertheless, Xu appears captivated by the idea.
According to the Journal, Xu has posted fantasies on Weibo about his children marrying Musk’s children someday, merging their bloodlines into a multinational dynasty.
An Alarmed U.S. Court Steps In
The Journal reports that in summer 2023, a California judge suddenly found himself dealing with petitions filed by Xu seeking parental rights over four unborn children and at least eight already born via surrogate.
The judge immediately called for a confidential hearing.
Xu appeared by video and announced he hoped to sire at least 20 U.S.-born boys, arguing that males are “superior” and better suited to inherit his business empire.
Despite spending millions on surrogacy arrangements, Xu admitted he had never met many of his own children, claiming he had been busy with work.
He said he planned to bring them to China.
The judge denied his petition, leaving multiple unborn children in legal limbo and exposing a booming surrogacy pipeline quietly enabling wealthy Chinese oligarchs to acquire American-born offspring.
A House Full of Children in California
Many of Xu’s children reportedly live in an Irvine, California, home staffed by nannies.
The operation resembles an industrial-scale child-rearing enterprise rather than any recognizable family structure.
Xu’s fixation on male heirs, his stated desire to build a multigenerational empire, and his apparent hope of merging bloodlines with Elon Musk’s family have fueled intense scrutiny of both his motives and the murky international surrogacy system that enabled it.
As the Journal notes, this case reveals a little-known, but rapidly growing, industry in which ultra-wealthy foreign nationals are paying U.S. surrogacy agencies to produce American children at scale.
And in Xu’s case, possibly hundreds.
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