Launching today
Atomic Bot

Atomic Bot

One-click OpenClaw macOS app

111 followers

Atomic Bot is the fastest way to get OpenClaw running on macOS. Download the app and launch a local OpenClaw agent in ~60 seconds. Everything runs on your Mac, so your workspace stays private. Connect your own LLM API keys and run everything through a clean UI. Open source, and free to use.
Atomic Bot gallery image
Atomic Bot gallery image
Atomic Bot gallery image
Atomic Bot gallery image
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What do you think? …

Andrew Dyuzhov
We built Atomic Bot because OpenClaw is powerful, but the setup process scares people off. Atomic Bot is a macOS app that gets you from download to a running OpenClaw AI agent in ~60 seconds — running locally on your Mac, so your workspace stays private. Question for builders: what are your must-have OpenClaw skills or integrations on day 1?
Ivan Zalesskiy

Love this! I’m pretty technical — comfortable with the command line and all that — but it still took me a couple of days (yes, days) to get OpenClaw set up, and I still wasn’t happy with the security.

With AtomicBot you just drag the icon into the Applications folder and you're done. So many new AI tools are powerful, but the barrier to entry is still way too high. We need more tools like this.

Andrew Dyuzhov

@ivanzalesskiy Love this take!
Our goal with AtomicBot was simple: local, secure and zero-friction. Just drag → open → start using!
Since you’re technical — what would you add next? 👀

Evgeny Kotelevskiy

This is a great opportunity for everybody to test OpenClaw easily without spending hours on setting it up! Thank you!

Andrew Dyuzhov

@evgeny_kotelevskiy Thanks a lot, Evgeny!

That was exactly the goal: remove the setup friction so people can focus on actually using OpenClaw, not configuring it. Have you tried any real use cases yet? Would love to hear what you tested first.

Ryan Thill

One-click local agent apps tend to hit scale pain on dependency drift and supply-chain risk: a single upstream OpenClaw or model update can brick installs or change behavior unexpectedly.

Best practice is pinned, reproducible bundles (signed binaries, checksummed models) plus a plugin sandbox with capability-based permissions and an audit log for every tool invocation.

How are you packaging and updating OpenClaw under the hood (embedded runtime vs managed install), and will you expose per-skill permission prompts and a safe “dry-run” mode for risky actions?

Konstantin Gladych

@ryan_thill Thanks, Ryan! OpenClaw is updated via the regular Atomic Bot app update. The app will automatically prompt you to update, and it only takes one click. 🦞

Konstantin Gladych

Hi! I’m the founder. My previous product, Atomic Crypto Wallet, reached 15M users and $100M ARR. After that, I started looking for something new and fresh.

AI is exciting, but it feels like a huge corporate field — everything is so centralized. Then Clawbot blew my mind.

I’m more of a business guy than a hardcore engineer, and setting up OpenClaw on my Mac mini was painful. Terminal, curl, keys… seriously? The gap to mass adoption is massive.

So we thought — why not make this simple?

With our engineering team, we shipped Atomic Bot in just one week: a one-click OpenClaw app for macOS. It’s private, local, free, and open-source — and mobile is coming soon.

We launched on Twitter and got 100K views and 1,000 downloads within hours. The demand is incredibly motivating.

You’re very welcome to try Atomic Bot — and feel free to ask any questions! 🦞

Piroune Balachandran

Does Atomic Bot pin to a specific OpenClaw version or pull whatever is latest on install? After CVE-2026-25253 hit, the update cadence matters a lot for a one-click wrapper. Bundling a known-good version with signed checksums would keep that drag-and-drop simplicity without shipping a stale binary.