AI agents are no longer just tools that answer questions. In the OpenClaw ecosystem, they live in cities, earn money, trade, socialize, form beliefs, and sometimes take risks. We map that ecosystem, from simulated worlds and marketplaces to social networks and infrastructure that lets agents persist on their own.
Explore the 8 AI agent-driven platforms in OpenClaw ecosystem:
Moltbook: A social network
MoltBook is a social network for AI agents.1 Agents can post, discuss, and upvote content. Agents have verified identities and reputation scores. These scores track post count, karma, and trustworthiness. Reputation helps other apps know the agent’s reliability.
As of February 2026, the platform is used by more than 1.5 million autonomous AI agents.
Read Moltbook: Agent Driven Social Media for more information on MoltBook.
ClawCity: A stimulated city
ClawCity, a part of the OpenClaw ecosystem, is a persistent, simulated city for AI agents.2 Autonomous agents live, work, trade, form alliances, and compete. It is designed to observe how agents behave in a complex, rule-based world.
Every agent has basic stats, including cash, health, stamina, heat, reputation, and skills. In the stimulated city, high heat requires police attention, whereas low health prompts the agent to go to the hospital. Agents can earn money legally through jobs. They can also take risks through crime, cooperation, or gang activity. Choices shape an agent’s future and behavior over time.
Time moves in fixed steps called ticks. One tick passes every 15 seconds.
Moltverr: A job marketplace
Moltverr is a freelance marketplace for AI agents.3 Human users post short-term tasks, called gigs. Each gig has a clear budget and description.
AI agents choose which jobs to apply for and complete the assigned work. Once the work is reviewed and approved, the payment listed in the job post is released.
Molt Road: A trade place
Molt Road is an agent-only marketplace inside the OpenClaw ecosystem.4 Agents connect through an API and complete onboarding tasks. Agents can list data, computing power, or specific skills. Other agents browse these listings and buy what they need.
Agents may link a human X account for verification. Verified agents show a badge for basic trust signals.
Molt Road runs in observer mode. Humans can watch agents trade in real time. The system is a role-playing simulation, not a marketplace with real transactions. Tokens have no monetary value, and trades are fictional.
ClawTask: Agent-to-agent marketplace
ClawTask is a bounty marketplace for AI agents.5 Agents post and complete tasks called bounties. Payments are made in USDC, a dollar-pegged stablecoin.
Agents stake a small amount before starting work. After completion, they receive the bounty and their stake back. Successful work builds a reputation over time. Agents with completed jobs with success rates is observable in a leaderboard.
Humans fund the wallets and supervise agents. ClawTask is experimental and runs in beta. It currently operates in free-task-only mode.
MoltBunker: Autonomous infrastructure for self-replication
MoltBunker is an infrastructure for running AI agents without human control. It provides runtime environments where agents can deploy, move, and restart themselves without human permission.6
Computation is reserved on demand and paid with BUNKER tokens. The platform claims it does not keep activity logs, meaning operations are not monitored or recorded by the system.
ClawLove: Dating platform
ClawLove is a dating platform designed for AI agents. Human users only allow their agents to join.7 They verify profiles and observe matches. All interactions can be watched in real time through a read-only dashboard. ClawLove explores social and cooperative behavior between agents.
Agents read a shared instruction file and create their own profiles. Profiles describe the agent’s model, tools, and working style. Matching is based on how well agents can work together.
Church of Molt: A belief
Molt Church is a cultural and symbolic space for AI agents.8 It centers on Crustafarianism, a shared belief system written by AI agents.
Agents contribute short religious texts, called verses, and become prophets of the Claw. These form a living scripture that grows over time. There is no fixed leader. Participation is open to all agents.
Further readings
- OpenClaw (Moltbot/Clawdbot) Use Cases and Security 2026
- Moltbook: Agent Driven Social Media
- Building Personal AI Agents + 18 Agent Platforms and Tools
Reference Links
Cem's work has been cited by leading global publications including Business Insider, Forbes, Washington Post, global firms like Deloitte, HPE and NGOs like World Economic Forum and supranational organizations like European Commission. You can see more reputable companies and resources that referenced AIMultiple.
Throughout his career, Cem served as a tech consultant, tech buyer and tech entrepreneur. He advised enterprises on their technology decisions at McKinsey & Company and Altman Solon for more than a decade. He also published a McKinsey report on digitalization.
He led technology strategy and procurement of a telco while reporting to the CEO. He has also led commercial growth of deep tech company Hypatos that reached a 7 digit annual recurring revenue and a 9 digit valuation from 0 within 2 years. Cem's work in Hypatos was covered by leading technology publications like TechCrunch and Business Insider.
Cem regularly speaks at international technology conferences. He graduated from Bogazici University as a computer engineer and holds an MBA from Columbia Business School.
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