OpenClaw Chinese Community

Chinese User Community and Localization Ecosystem O Industry Applications

Basic Information

  • Company/Brand: OpenClaw Chinese Community / Multi-party Organization
  • Country/Region: China
  • Official Website: https://openclaw.cn/ / https://clawd.org.cn/
  • Type: Chinese User Community and Localization Ecosystem
  • Founded: Early 2026 (established with the rise of the "Raising Lobsters" trend)

Product Description

The OpenClaw Chinese Community is the localized community ecosystem of OpenClaw in the Chinese market, composed of multiple community sites, social media platforms, and enterprise service providers. OpenClaw is affectionately known as "Lobster" in China (due to its lobster icon), and "raising lobsters" has become a popular term for deploying and using OpenClaw agents. The Chinese community supports integration with local communication platforms such as Feishu, DingTalk, Enterprise WeChat, and QQ, building a comprehensive OpenClaw usage ecosystem in Chinese. Mainstream Chinese platforms like Xinhua News, Baidu Baike, TMTPost, and Zhihu have in-depth coverage and discussions.

Core Features/Characteristics

  • Chinese Community Sites: openclaw.cn (Lobster Chinese Website) and clawd.org.cn provide Chinese documentation and tutorials
  • Local Platform Integration: Guides for integrating OpenClaw with Feishu, DingTalk, Enterprise WeChat, and QQ
  • Baidu Baike: OpenClaw has an official Baidu Baike entry
  • Xinhua News Coverage: Xinhua News published the "Lobster Safety Raising Manual" (March 17, 2026) and an analysis of the "Lobster Paradox"
  • Zhihu In-depth Analysis: Renowned authors like Chen Wei have published ultra-deep technical analysis articles
  • TMTPost Coverage: Analysis of the "OpenClaw Explosion" and the computing power competition among major companies
  • Feishu Official: Feishu's official website released a zero-barrier tutorial titled "Raising Shrimp in Feishu in 2 Minutes"
  • 36Kr Tracking: 36Kr reported on "The First Batch of OpenClaw Pioneers Are Now Becoming Sober"

Business Model

  • Chinese community sites are free and open
  • Commercial products like Tencent ClawBot are based on the OpenClaw ecosystem
  • Enterprise platforms like Feishu increase platform value through OpenClaw integration
  • Chinese skill developers can distribute skills via ClawHub
  • Local governments provide subsidies for "one-person company" AI agent startups

Target Users

  • Chinese technology developers
  • Chinese enterprises and entrepreneurs
  • Feishu/DingTalk/Enterprise WeChat users
  • Participants in the "raising lobsters" culture
  • Ordinary Chinese users interested in AI agents

Competitive Advantages

  • Localization Depth: Comprehensive Chinese documentation, tutorials, and community support
  • Local Platforms: Supports Chinese local communication platforms like Feishu, DingTalk, Enterprise WeChat, and QQ
  • Official Media Attention: Coverage by official media like Xinhua News enhances credibility
  • "Raising Lobsters" Culture: Viral cultural phenomenon drives user growth
  • Government Support: Local governments provide startup subsidies, promoting the AI agent industry

Market Performance

  • China's adoption rate of OpenClaw has surpassed that of the US (SecurityScorecard data)
  • Baidu hosted a large OpenClaw installation event in Beijing, with hundreds of people queuing
  • Xinhua News has published multiple OpenClaw-related reports, reflecting official attention
  • Tech media like 36Kr and TMTPost continue to track and report
  • "Raising lobsters" has spread from the AI circle to various industries
  • Feishu officially launched OpenClaw integration solutions, proving enterprise-level recognition

Relationship with the OpenClaw Ecosystem

The Chinese community is the largest and most active non-English community within the global OpenClaw ecosystem. The explosive growth of the Chinese user base directly propelled OpenClaw to surpass the 250K GitHub stars milestone. The uniqueness of the Chinese community lies in: (1) Integration with local communication platforms (Feishu/DingTalk/WeChat/QQ) embedding OpenClaw into China's digital ecosystem; (2) Major products like Tencent ClawBot pushing OpenClaw to a billion-level WeChat user base; (3) Government-level restrictions (security risk warnings) and support (startup subsidies); (4) The "raising lobsters" cultural phenomenon spreading from the tech circle to popular culture. However, security issues have also garnered widespread attention in China—the National Internet Emergency Center issued risk warnings, and Xinhua News published the "Safety Raising Manual" to guide users in safe usage.