Chinese motorcycle brands have been popping up fast, and some of them are getting ambitious enough to step onto the global stage. ZX Moto is one of the newest names trying to make that move, and its story starts in a pretty unusual place.
So here’s the weird part. ZX Moto’s founder, Zhang Xue, is the same guy who started Kove Moto. Yep, the brand that made a big splash with rally bikes and even showed up at Dakar. Then out of nowhere he steps away from that whole project and pops up again with a brand new company. It feels a little sus, honestly. Like, who starts one motorcycle brand, leaves it hanging, then starts another one right after. But here we are, and ZX Moto is now trying to make its own mark.
Once you get past the eyebrow raise, the story actually gets interesting. Zhang Xue isn’t some random dude. He’s an engineer who’s been deep in the powertrain world for years. Before any shiny show bikes, he was building engines and doing contract work for other manufacturers. So ZX Moto didn’t come out of thin air. It came from a guy who knows how to make motors work and wants full control over how they’re used.
That’s why the brand showed up at EICMA looking surprisingly legit. No hype machines. No fantasy prototypes. Just straight up production ready bikes that look like they could roll off the line tomorrow. The one everyone talked about was the 820 X, their take on an adventure bike. And yeah, it looks familiar, but that’s the point.

This thing runs a three cylinder engine with an 818.8cc displacement. It makes 117 horsepower at 11,000 rpm and 63 pound feet of torque at 9,000 rpm. Those numbers put it right in the mix with the Triumph Tiger 900 and MV Agusta Enduro Veloce. Coming from a brand that’s barely launched, that’s kind of wild.
The chassis is a simple steel frame with an aluminum swingarm. Seat height is 32.7 inches, wheelbase is 60.3 inches, and dry weight is 481 pounds. It rolls on a 19 inch front and 17 inch rear, so it’s in that comfy middle ground where you can do road trips but still dip into light trails without stressing it out.
Visually, it leans into what riders already know. There’s a V-Strom style beak. The boomerang shaped side scoops feel like a nod to the BMW GS lineup. The prototype at EICMA was dressed in sand paint with luggage, almost like ZX Moto wanted to make sure nobody mistook this for a concept.
The real hook, though, is the engine layout. Three cylinders are rare in the Chinese market because they’re more expensive to build, but ZX Moto went for it anyway. The 13 to 1 compression ratio, Bosch injection, and electronic throttle setup show that the brand isn’t messing around. Even the throttle has backup cables, which is a nice touch if you’re the type who worries about electronics dying mid trip.
So why should we care about a bike from a brand most people haven’t heard of? Simple. This is what the next wave of competition looks like. Not cheap clones. Not bargain bikes that fall apart. Actual engineered products from new companies that want to hit global markets. Europe will probably get first dibs once ZX Moto finds a distributor, but if the brand actually delivers, North America won’t be far behind, provided tariffs don’t serve as too big a road block.
At the end of the day, more players in the ADV space is good news. Prices have been creeping up, and big brands don’t really have a reason to slow down. If bikes like the 820 X make it out of China with real spec and real testing behind them, riders everywhere benefit. Even if the whole “one founder, two brands” thing still feels kinda weird.
Source: Moto-Station