--- title: "Targeting Alibaba and ByteDance! Report: Tencent secretly lays out WeChat AI intelligence, may open to all users within the year" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/278580070.md" description: "Tencent is secretly developing an AI intelligent agent, planning to launch gray box testing in mid-year and roll it out to all users in the third quarter. This agent will connect to millions of mini-programs on the WeChat platform, aiming to replace the 1.4 billion monthly active users in completing various tasks, directly challenging the market dominance of Alibaba and ByteDance. Recently, Tencent launched three AI Agent products, all embedded in high-frequency applications like WeChat, demonstrating its strategic shift to promote AI capabilities using its existing ecosystem" datetime: "2026-03-10T15:10:41.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/278580070.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/278580070.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/278580070.md) --- > Supported Languages: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/278580070.md) | [繁體中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/278580070.md) # Targeting Alibaba and ByteDance! Report: Tencent secretly lays out WeChat AI intelligence, may open to all users within the year Tencent is betting on breakthroughs in the AI competition within the WeChat ecosystem. On March 10, according to The Information, **four informed sources revealed that Tencent is secretly developing an AI agent for its application WeChat, a project classified as a high-priority confidential plan, with a start date that can be traced back to at least the first half of last year.** According to the plan, **Tencent intends to launch gray box testing in mid-year and roll it out to all users in the third quarter.** The informed sources also indicated that if the functionality is not yet mature, the launch timeline may still be adjusted. Once this agent is implemented, it will connect to millions of mini-programs within the WeChat platform, covering various services such as ride-hailing and food delivery, replacing the need for 1.4 billion monthly active users to complete these tasks independently. **This move will greatly expand the application scenarios of AI agents domestically and directly challenge the first-mover advantages established by Alibaba and ByteDance in this field.** Riding the wave of the "lobster craze" that has sparked interest in AI Agents, Tencent is accelerating its investments. In fact, **whether in the layout of AI Agents or leveraging the WeChat entry point, Tencent has quietly made moves long ago, and this is merely another significant bet in response to the trend.** ## Tencent has launched three AI Agents The heat in the AI Agent sector continues to rise, and Tencent is accelerating its layout with high-frequency actions. In March, **Tencent launched three AI Agent products in one day**, targeting three core scenarios: the personal local control "QClaw" (which supports remote operation of computers in WeChat chat windows), the enterprise collaboration scenario "Enterprise WeChat Robot," and the multi-platform office assistant "WorkBuddy" (which can seamlessly integrate with mainstream tools like Feishu and DingTalk). It is noteworthy that **none of the three products adopted an independent app form but were directly embedded into high-frequency applications such as WeChat, Enterprise WeChat, and QQ, relying on the existing ecosystem to inject capabilities.** This approach reflects Tencent's strategic shift in this sector: abandoning the traditional path of promoting independent clients and instead leveraging the entry advantages of the WeChat ecosystem to transform AI capabilities from "tools that need to be specifically opened" into "services that exist natively within the dialogue flow." By eliminating complex configurations and achieving natural language invocation, Tencent aims to seize the core entry point of the next generation of human-computer interaction as the competition in AI Agents shifts from technical competition to popularization. ## The core advantage of the WeChat ecosystem Tencent's plan to embed the AI agent into the WeChat body rather than as an independent application is based on **the irreplaceable ecological scale of WeChat.** According to reports, this AI agent will be presented in a conversational format within the user's chat list, completing various tasks by invoking mini-programs. However, this strategy also reflects Tencent's dilemma in its AI layout. According to reports citing two individuals familiar with Tencent executives' thinking, **Tencent cannot risk damaging the vast user experience of WeChat with immature technology.** In May 2024, Tencent launched an independent AI application Yuanbao, but the market response was lukewarmAccording to data from the Chinese AI product tracking website Aicpb.com, as of February this year, **Yuanbao has approximately 109 million monthly active users, far lower than ByteDance's Doubao at 315 million and Alibaba's Tongyi at 202 million.** In contrast, Alibaba has integrated Tongyi with its e-commerce, online travel, mapping, and Ant Group's payment platform, allowing users to complete tasks such as online grocery shopping and booking flights; ByteDance has also upgraded Doubao to an intelligent agent capable of handling e-commerce and various tasks. Both companies released new generations of AI models last month, claiming they are better suited for handling complex multi-step tasks. ## Model Selection Constraints, Self-Research Path Yet to be Verified **In terms of underlying model selection, the WeChat team has not yet confirmed the adoption of Tencent's self-developed Hunyuan model.** According to reports citing three informed sources, the Hunyuan model has not yet reached top-tier status in the industry. Two of them stated that **the WeChat team has tested models from several Chinese manufacturers, including Zhipu, Alibaba, and DeepSeek, while also evaluating a small model developed in-house by WeChat.** However, using external models means that the integration and verification cycle for WeChat's internal stored data will be correspondingly extended. In terms of talent layout, Tencent brought in Yao Shunyu from OpenAI last September, appointing him as Tencent's Chief AI Scientist, authorizing him to lead the development of the Hunyuan model, and providing ample budget to recruit talent from competitors like ByteDance. Meanwhile, the WeChat team, led by WeChat founder Zhang Xiaolong, is also advancing independent AI model development, having published two technical papers on its official blog in January, covering model capability enhancement under limited resources and post-training methods. WeChat's technical leader, Zhou Hao (Harvey Zhou), reports to Zhang Xiaolong and oversees the AI team. ## Intensifying Competitive Landscape, Tencent Faces Pressure to Catch Up From a broader perspective, Tencent's recent push into the AI agent space is actually a concentrated reflection of global tech giants vying for entry points into AI assistants. **From Silicon Valley to China, major companies are racing to launch AI assistants capable of autonomously completing complex tasks such as programming and shopping, attempting to seize the high ground in the next generation of human-computer interaction.** **For Tencent, this competition brings both opportunities and pressures.** Compared to Alibaba and ByteDance's proactive moves in the AI field, Tencent's previous pace has seemed somewhat slow. However, since the launch of WeChat Mini Programs in 2017, it has built a significant ecological barrier with an extremely smooth user experience, prompting global players like Microsoft, Snapchat, and Google to follow suit. This ecological moat, accumulated over eight years, should have become Tencent's core advantage in the era of AI agents. The key question is: **How to effectively transform this ecological advantage into AI competitiveness without undermining the existing user experience, thereby achieving a lead?** ## **The Battle for Entry Points is the Real Main Battlefield** On the surface, this battle is about whose "intelligent agent" is more powerful and user-friendly. But fundamentally, the focus of the competition is shifting from "functionality" to "entry points"—the logic of AI usage is being reshaped. In the past, users needed to actively open independent apps, ask questions, wait for generation, and then manually transfer results; this lengthy chain raised the usage threshold and hindered large-scale adoptionToday, with QClaw integrating with WeChat, WorkBuddy compatible with Feishu and DingTalk, ArkClaw deeply adapting to Feishu, and CoPaw connecting DingTalk and Feishu, these products convey a clear message: the main battlefield for AI agents is shifting from standalone applications to the communication and office tools where people are already active. **Whoever is closer to the user has a more valuable entry point. When AI truly resides in your chat list, the act of "using AI" has genuinely entered the daily lives of ordinary people.** At the same time, an unresolved deep-water issue is gradually surfacing: **security**. When AI agents are granted permissions to control local devices, access files, and execute sensitive commands, how to prevent unauthorized access, how to defend against malicious prompt injections, and how to ensure data privacy are issues that, although addressed in some enterprise-level solutions, still have a long way to go before forming an industry-wide "security safety net." From "struggling for three hours without installation" to "download and use, just send a message to get to work," the speed of AI agent adoption is exceeding everyone's expectations. And this battle for entry points has just begun. Risk Warning and Disclaimer The market has risks, and investment requires caution. This article does not constitute personal investment advice and does not take into account the specific investment goals, financial situation, or needs of individual users. Users should consider whether any opinions, views, or conclusions in this article align with their specific circumstances. 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