Tencent moved deeper into China’s AI agent fight on Sunday when it launched a new tool that links WeChat with OpenClaw called ClawBot.
With allegedly more than 1 billion monthly active users on WeChat, Tencent is putting an agent tool inside one of the biggest consumer apps in the country.
The move comes as OpenClaw has picked up speed in recent weeks. The open-source agent can handle tasks for users, including sending emails and transferring files on their behalf.
Chinese users have been rushing to test agent products, while tech firms try to turn that interest into business. At the same time, authorities have warned about security risks tied to these systems.
Earlier this month, Tencent also launched its own broader agent lineup. That suite includes QClaw for individual users, Lighthouse for developers, and WorkBuddy for enterprise customers.
Tencent pushes OpenClaw into WeChat while rivals race to lock down China’s fast-growing agent market
This latest rollout lands in the middle of a bigger fight across China’s tech sector. Last week, Alibaba launched Wukong, an enterprise AI platform built to coordinate several agents in one interface. The platform is designed to handle harder office work, such as document editing and meeting transcription.
Baidu then moved quickly with its own set of tools built on OpenClaw. Those products cover desktop software, cloud services, mobile tools, and smart-home devices. So this is no side story anymore. Major firms are now trying to plant agents across consumer apps, business software, cloud systems, and connected hardware at the same time.
That wider push also showed up in Beijing. The China Development Forum 2026, held from March 22 to March 23, put industrial AI near the center of discussion.
This year’s forum carried the theme, “China in its 15th Five-Year Plan period: advancing high-quality development and creating new opportunities together.” The meeting came as China entered its 15th Five-Year Plan period for 2026 to 2030. The government has been giving more weight to industrial AI for years.
For three straight years, the government work report has included plans under the AI+ initiative. This year, it added a new phrase: a “new form of intelligent economy.” The goal is to expand AI use across industries and build new engines for growth.
Nvidia readies China-focused Groq chips as Jensen Huang ties robotics demand to China’s supply chain strength
The China story does not stop with software. It also runs straight into chips. Reuters reported on Tuesday that Nvidia is preparing a version of Groq artificial-intelligence chips for sale in China.
Nvidia licensed Groq technology late last year in a $17 billion deal and then showed new products built around those chips at its annual developer conference in San Jose, California, this week.
The plan is tied to inference, the part of AI work where systems answer questions, write code, or carry out tasks for users. In the products shown this week, Nvidia plans to pair its coming Vera Rubin chips, which cannot be sold in China, with Groq chips.
At the same time, Jensen Huang said Nvidia has restarted production of its H200 chips after getting export licenses from President Donald Trump’s administration and purchase orders from Chinese customers.
On a podcast recorded during Nvidia’s GTC event in San Jose and released Friday, Jensen said, “I think China is formidable.” He said China’s strength in microelectronics, motors, rare earths, and magnets gives it a powerful position in robotics.
He added, “So in a lot of ways, our robotics industry relies deeply on their ecosystem and their supply chain.” Jensen also said the United States “largely invented” the industry but became “tired and exhausted” before the arrival of the key enabling technology, which he called “the brain.”
Jensen then said Nvidia was ready to ship chips to China and added, “As we speak, Nvidia gave up a 95 per cent market share in the second largest market in the world, and we are at 0 per cent. President Trump wants us to get back in there.”
Source: https://www.cryptopolitan.com/tencent-wechat-to-bring-openclaw-ai-agents/