Billionaire fathers more than 100 children

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- Billionaire fathers over 100 children via surrogacy in the United States
- Plans to build a vast family dynasty and marry some of them to Elon Musk’s children
Chinese businessman Xu Bo, known as "China’s first father," revealed his grand ambition to form a vast family lineage, as he owns over 100 children born in the United States through surrogacy agencies, and dreams that some of them will marry the children of Tesla CEO Elon Musk to build a "great family."
Xu, 48, made his fortune by founding the Chinese online gaming company "Duoyi," and is obsessed with leaving a wide legacy of offspring.
He publicly declared on social media, according to verification by an American newspaper, that he aims to father no less than "50 high-quality sons."
His company later confirmed that he had fathered over 100 children through surrogacy in the United States.
The story grew even more surprising after shocking statements from his ex-girlfriend Tang Jing, who claimed that Xu had fathered more than 300 children, confirming that she herself raised 11 of them for years.
Xu is currently engaged in a legal battle over the custody of his two daughters with Jing, after stating that he had paid her substantial amounts over the years, without objecting to her post about his enormous number of children.
According to reports, Xu’s ambition was influenced by Elon Musk, who admired his views on population growth, as reports suggested Musk encouraged those around him to have more children using his genetic material, despite publicly denying these claims.
In mid-2023, a court in California examined several applications filed by Xu seeking legal recognition of his parenthood over four unborn children, in addition to at least eight others through paid surrogacy arrangements.
During the session, Xu stated that he plans to father no fewer than 20 children in the United States, preferring male heirs whom he believes will eventually inherit the management of his company.
The court rejected Xu’s requests, leaving the legal status of these unborn children unresolved, and the case also highlighted the network of surrogacy agencies that help wealthy Chinese businessmen have children in the United States.
