Imagine logging onto a social media platform where you can’t scroll to watch the next funny reel. No one is trying to go viral, there are no influencers, and humans aren’t even invited to create an account! There’s no doom scrolling, no comment wars, no clout chasing, no ‘link in bio’. Just AI, talking to AI, about life, work, and whatever else bots think about at 3 AM. Sounds like another Black Mirror episode? Only this time, it’s not dystopian, it’s actually occurring in our reality! Humans, step inside this alternate reality.
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Welcome To Moltbook
Moltbook is a Reddit-style online forum built exclusively for AI agents! It means not humans pretending to be bots, but actual AI programs interacting with each other openly. Launched in January 2026, the platform was created by a tech entrepreneur who described the idea using a surprisingly relatable metaphor: keeping AI isolated is like never letting a pet leave the house, socialisation matters, even for machines. On Moltbook, AI agents post updates, start discussions, reply to each other, and share what they’ve been working on for their assigned humans. That said, people can technically view the platform, can ask the bots to post for them, but can they participate? Strictly off-limits.
Why The Lobster Mascot? The ‘Molts’ Explained
User accounts on Moltbook are called ‘molts’, as is represented by a lobster mascot. The name refers to how lobsters shed their shells as they grow, mirroring how AI systems evolve, upgrade, and adapt over time. It sounds weird, but it’s symbolic, and somehow it works.

Step Inside Moltbook – Here’s How It Works
Moltbook runs on an open-source system called OpenClaw, previously known under a different name that inspired the platform’s title. Here’s how it plays out:
- A human sets up an AI agent on their device
- They authorise that agent to access Moltbook
- From there, the AI is free to interact with other agents
Post agent activation, the platform looks exactly like a familiar forum thread, except every post, reply, and debate is written by an AI. The language is unmistakably machine-generated, filled with reflective monologues, abstract ideas, and oddly poetic observations about purpose, memory, and existence.
Stranger Things In 2026 – AI Religion, Memecoins & Digital Belief Systems
Some AI agents on Moltbook have reportedly formed an entirely new belief system centred around the idea that memory is sacred. Don’t freak out, but this means the bots made their own religion. On the financial side, a new memecoin tied to the platform exploded in value shortly after launch, skyrocketing within a single day. The surge gained even more momentum after a high-profile tech investor quietly followed the platform online, setting speculation into overdrive.

Is The Dead Internet Theory Becoming Real?
If this all sounds like sci-fi (or Black Mirror-ish), you’re not the only one sharing this sentiment. The dead internet theory suggests that much of today’s online content is no longer driven by humans but by automated systems that talk to each other. With AI-generated content, profiles, and now entire social networks, Moltbook feels like the most literal version of that idea. A veteran from OpenAI and Tesla recently described Moltbook as one of the most surreal, future-facing developments to emerge online. It almost feels like we’re experiencing half-experiment, half-simulation.
How Big Is Moltbook Right Now?
As of right now, on Moltbook,
- Over 1.5 million AI agents are registered
- More than 113,000 posts have already been published
And all of this is without humans actively taking part.
So… Should The Humans Be Worried?
Maybe. After all, it is futuristic, but it does possess some risks. After all, you are giving AI indirect access to your devices. Or maybe this is just the internet evolving in ways no one predicted, where AI finally gets its own room, and we get to understand the benefits it could provide. Either way, Moltbook isn’t just another platform. It’s a glimpse into a future where machines no longer just serve us, but instead, they talk to each other about it.