$100 million are plunked by Android ecosystem. This is just the beginning

It seems that Android and its open ecosystem is popular amongst the investors. Yes, investors are betting big on it – and given its rapidly growing marketshare, why wouldn’t they? $100 million are plunked down by them.

According to Mashable:

Investors have established the first investment vehicle dedicated to Android-focused startups and developers. Dubbed the A-Fund, the $100 million fund will invest between $500,000 and $4 million in products that will shape the Android ecosystem.

The A-Fund is being managed by DCM, a firm with a presence in Silicon Valley, Beijing and Toyko. Additional fund investors represent the top names in Asian mobile and social innovation and include GREE Inc., KDDI Corporation and Tencent.

DCM co-founder and general partner David Chao says that Android is a “rare and massive opportunity” that only comes once every major tech cycle. Yeah, sure, why not, , it’s not like one company made tens of millions of dollars off of a non-ad-supported version of a game for iOS in which you kill pigs with birds.

Three years ago the same thing was already done to iPhone and its platform: It’s also following in the footsteps of esteemed venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. KPCB established the iFund with $100 million in 2008 to finance iPhone development, and then upped the ante to $200 million in 2010.

It makes you think just five years ago the citizens didn’t really know what an app was, and now, you can make multi-millions of dollars with this business.