The AI tool OpenClaw, nicknamed "Crawfish," has unexpectedly become the hottest trend in the tech world in early 2026. Its popularity has surged rapidly across social media, attracting attention from prominent tech leaders including Tencent founder Pony Ma and Qihoo 360's Zhou Hongyi. Ma shared related news on his social feed, admitting he "did not expect it to become so popular."
Lei Jun, CEO of Xiaomi, also joined the trend despite an injury, adopting a "crawfish" named "San Wan" while recovering. Within two weeks, this digital assistant evolved into an eight-member AI agent team capable of working automatically around the clock and even planning a social media post that garnered over a million views.
As excitement around OpenClaw grows, a commercial ecosystem is quickly forming around it. On March 9, a seller offering remote installation services reported overwhelming demand, with orders placed at 11 a.m. scheduled for evening installation due to high volume. The seller noted that on-site installation is particularly time-consuming.
On second-hand trading platforms, remote installation currently costs around 150 yuan, while on-site service is priced at approximately 500 yuan. Some vendors have warned that prices may increase further after March 15.
On March 6, a long queue formed outside Tencent’s Shenzhen headquarters as nearly a thousand developers and AI enthusiasts gathered for free assistance with cloud-based installation of OpenClaw. Participants ranged from developers and students to retired tech enthusiasts, with ages spanning from 9 to 60 years old. Some parents even attended on behalf of their children, creating a scene compared to traditional holiday gift-giving.
OpenClaw, an AI agent tool developed by Austrian programmer Peter Steinberger, started as a weekend side project and has become one of the fastest-growing open-source projects on GitHub. Unlike conversational AI tools like ChatGPT, OpenClaw can perform tasks autonomously—such as reading files, searching the web, writing code, and sending emails—making it a practical digital employee for many programmers.
One developer described the difference: "Tools like DeepSeek are like a smart brain that can think but lacks hands and feet. OpenClaw’s biggest advantage is that it gives AI the ability to actually execute tasks."
As demand surges, entrepreneurs are capitalizing on the trend. Sellers on platforms like Xianyu offer installation services, tutorials, and even bundled "optimized" packages with premium plugins, some priced as high as 3,000 yuan. On March 5, daily transaction volume for OpenClaw-related services increased by 150% compared to previous periods, with inquiries rising over 120%.
A seller reported that installation requests have skyrocketed, with remote service fees rising from 150 to 200 yuan and on-site fees jumping from 500 to 800 yuan—some even charging a flat rate of 1,000 yuan. Vendors anticipate further price increases after March 15, with some reportedly earning up to 260,000 yuan within days from installation services.
Major tech firms are also racing to launch their own versions. Tencent is developing QClaw, a one-click installation package for OpenClaw, and has announced WorkBuddy, a full-scenario AI agent with over 20 built-in skill packages. ByteDance’s Volcano Engine released ArkClaw, a SaaS version usable directly via web browser.
In recent weeks, a wave of similar products has emerged: MiniMax launched MaxClaw, Kimi introduced Kimi Claw, Alibaba open-sourced CoPaw, Baidu released a mobile version, and Xiaomi began testing MiclawAgent, which CEO Lei Jun dubbed "Mobile Crawfish."
However, users are advised to remain cautious about security risks. Zhou Hongyi praised OpenClaw for making AI agents accessible but highlighted three key challenges: security vulnerabilities, high installation barriers for average users, and limited functionality for everyday tasks.
China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology has also warned that improperly configured OpenClaw instances may pose significant security risks, including potential cyber attacks and data leaks. Users are advised to strengthen authentication, access controls, and data encryption, and to monitor official security updates closely.