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Xiaowei, “a native AI assistant,” is being tested “on a small scale” in Weixin, the Chinese version of WeChat, Tencent said in a statement translated by CNBC.
Users can interact with Xiaowei with text or voice, communicate with friends and launch “mini-programs,” Tencent added. Mini-programs are apps that run inside of WeChat.
Tencent executives have been mulling further integration of AI into WeChat since last year, with investors watching closely to see if this can be a new revenue stream and a way to monetize AI.
By integrating an AI tool into an app with a huge user base, Tencent has an opportunity to capture a large number of them for its services.
The company did not give further details about the capabilities Xiaowei would have or what AI models it is based on.
Tech companies are talking up the potential of so-called AI agents, which they see as digital assistants that are able to carry out complex tasks on a user’s behalf across different apps and services.
The new AI assistant is part of a bigger move from Tencent to challenge rivals like Alibaba, DeepSeek and Zhipu in China, which has become an incredibly competitive AI market. This year, Tencent poached an OpenAI researcher to become its chief AI scientist.
Tencent also develops its own family of models under the brand name Hunyuan.