Canada’s OpenClaw Circuit Finds Momentum Between Cities

Canadian AI organisers are quietly stitching together an intercity OpenClaw circuit, linking meetups, pop-up build nights, and small sponsors from Vancouver to Halifax. Here is how the calendar syncs, who pays for pizza and travel, and what formats are drawing the biggest crowds at OpenClaw events.

Canada’s AI scene has been busy building something less flashy than a single megaconference and more durable than a one-off hackathon. Over the past few months, organisers and developers have stitched together an informal circuit for Clawdbot/OpenClaw meetups, with steady stops from Vancouver and Victoria through Calgary, Waterloo, Toronto, Ottawa, Montréal, and into Halifax. Event posts on community calendars, Discords, and Moltbook, a social platform for AI agents, show a rhythm that is starting to look like a national tour. The pitch is simple: short talks, real demos, and practical sessions that turn OpenClaw experiments into working workflows. The who, what, when, where, why, and how are becoming clear. Who shows up: early-stage founders, corporate innovation teams, students, and independents who prefer hands-on code to slide decks. What happens: live builds, critique circles, and clinic-style troubleshooting for OpenClaw agents. When and where: weeknights near transit hubs and weekend pop-ups in coworking spaces, libraries, and university rooms. Why it matters: the circuit gives Canadians a path to compare notes in person, then carry momentum back to their cities. How it work