0G Labs is rolling out a six-month push to bring Chinese-speaking developers into a decentralized AI ecosystem, along with two local partners, HackQuest and Tintinland. The purpose is simple. It’s easy to learn 0g stacks in Chinese and features over 3,000 builders in the protocol.
Unlike one-off webinars and translated documents, the program is built around hands-on training, community building and real-world meetups. According to 0G, the goal is to remove language barriers that often slow adoption, allowing Web3 and AI developers to use the core services in the language they actually work with.
What the program offers
The learning path is divided into several tracks. HackQuest leads the Chinese curriculum, which includes three online bootcamps, each scheduled as a large virtual session with hundreds of participants. These bootcamps show how participants can build apps on top of the practical parts of the 0G stack, distributed storage and calculations, data availability, and protocols.
At the same time, Tintinland will create two Chinese video courses and run two additional developer bootcamps focusing on building 0g AI solutions. The idea is to provide developers with both theoretical and practical experiences, and the hands-on experience needed to ship AI-native apps to a distributed platform.
Content, contests, mentorships
0G Labs aren’t just about teaching. You are trying to seed a permanent knowledge base. The program includes two technical writing contests designed to surface high quality original Chinese content. In addition to that, 0G Labs plans to publish a series of deep technical articles in Chinese to embody the documentation for local developers and how-TO.
To maintain growth, 0G is looking to recruit 10 technical leaders from the community. These are people who can mentor newcomers, lead workshops and act as local ambassadors for protocols across Asia.
The six-month run concludes with an online AMA and workshop, ranging from core technical ideas to practical project tutorials. However, 0G is investing offline. Developer meetups are planned in five cities and two universities, allowing people to face-to-face, try out demonstrations and form local networks.
Why is this important?
0G is the first distributed AI protocol, a modular, infinitely scalable layer-1 designed specifically for AI execution. It combines distributed storage, calculation and data availability to support AI-Native applications, ensuring verifiable AI processing and an authorized agent ecosystem. For such a technical stack to gain traction, developers need low friction methods for learning and experimentation.
Local language education and practical boot camps are practical ways to make that happen. If the programme achieves its goal of onboarding thousands of developers, it could significantly expand the pool of people building at 0g. Ideally, you can speed up the creation of distributed AI apps that may not get you off the ground due to language and tool barriers.
Overall, 0G Labs bets that not only translated press releases but actual recruitment will come from the local community. By entering resources into Chinese training, courses, competitions and meetups, you are trying to prove that your investment will pay off for active builders and better localized technical content.

