The most important interface for the next wave of AI agents may not look like a new app at all.
It may look like a message.
A user types a sentence into Slack, Teams, WhatsApp, Telegram, a browser search bar or a document sidebar: find this, compare that, prepare a reply, summarize the thread, check the file, book the meeting, generate the report. The instruction may feel casual, but it marks a deeper shift in how software is used.
For years, software asked users to come to it. Open the app. Learn the interface. Navigate the workflow. Click the right buttons in the right order. The user had to translate intent into software operations.
AI agents reverse part of that burden. The user expresses intent first. The system decides which tools, models, files or services need to be involved.
That is why messaging may become one of the most important surfaces in the agent market. A message is already how people delegate work to colleagues. It is also how they ask for help, assign tasks, send context and follow up. If agents are meant to act on behalf of users, the message thread is a natural place for that relationship to begin.
This changes the meaning of distribution. In the app era, distribution meant getting users to install or open a product. In the agent era, distribution may mean being present at the moment a task is first expressed.
That moment rarely starts inside a dedicated AI agent app. It starts when someone is reading an email, scanning a spreadsheet, reviewing a document, searching for information, replying in a group chat or trying to coordinate work across tools. The agent that can appear there has an advantage over the agent waiting somewhere else.
This is why major AI companies are pushing agents into existing surfaces rather than relying only on standalone assistants. Microsoft’s Copilot is not just a chatbot; it lives across Office, Teams, Windows and developer tools. Google is embedding Gemini across Search, Workspace and Android. Salesforce is putting agents inside CRM workflows, where sales and customer-service tasks already begin. Anthropic is bringing Claude into Slack, turning a workplace conversation into a place where an AI assistant can be invoked in context.
The common logic is simple: agents need to be close to intent.
Tencent’s agent push can be read through the same lens. QClaw connects agents to familiar messaging channels such as WhatsApp and Telegram, making the agent feel less like a separate destination and more like a contact. WorkBuddy brings agent capabilities closer to desktop and workplace tasks. Yuanbao, ima, Tencent Docs and QQ Browser sit near search, reading, writing and document workflows. TokenHub and Tencent’s agent development tools support the model and deployment layer behind those user-facing surfaces.
The interesting part is not that Tencent has launched another AI assistant. Many companies have. The more important question is whether Tencent can place agents across enough everyday entry points that users do not need to think about where the agent lives.
That is becoming a first-tier AI platform question. Microsoft has the workplace surface. Google has search, mobile and productivity. Salesforce has business records and customer operations. Anthropic has developer and collaboration momentum. OpenAI has ChatGPT as a general-purpose AI destination and is pushing toward task execution. Tencent has communication, documents, browsers, cloud infrastructure and a growing agent product layer.
The next stage of competition may depend less on whether users open a new AI app, and more on whether AI appears inside the tools they already use.
This is also why the language around agents may change. An agent may not always announce itself as an agent. It may appear as a contact in a messaging app, a button in a document, a suggestion in a browser, a command in a search box or a teammate inside a collaboration thread. The interface becomes familiar; the execution behind it becomes more complex.
That could make agents less visible but more useful. The best agent experience may not ask users to change behavior dramatically. It may simply meet them where they already express intent.
In that sense, the agent race is not only about intelligence or autonomy. It is about proximity.
The winning platforms may be the ones closest to the sentence where work begins.





