India edition brings RL infrastructure, $30K prizes, and direct hiring access

The OpenEnv AI Hackathon has arrived in India, expanding access to advanced reinforcement learning (RL) infrastructure for developers and signalling a shift toward hands-on AI system building. Following its debut in San Francisco, the national-level competition is being organised by Scaler School of Technology in collaboration with Meta, Hugging Face, and PyTorch.
At its core is OpenEnvan open-source framework designed for building RL environments where AI agents learn through interaction with dynamic, real-world-like systems rather than static datasets. The hackathon shifts focus from prototype demos to creating usable infrastructure, with participants expected to develop environments that contribute to the global open-source ecosystem.
The competition will unfold in multiple stages, starting with an online round and culminating in a 48-hour in-person finale at the SST campus in Bengaluru. Finalists will collaborate on-site while engaging directly with engineers working on next-generation AI systems. Projects will be evaluated by Meta’s engineering teams, with emphasis on real-world applicability and system-level innovation.
Top teams will compete for a $30,000 prize pool and, notably, direct interview opportunities with AI teams at Meta and Hugging Faceeffectively turning project outcomes into hiring pipelines. This integration of competition and recruitment reflects a broader industry trend toward sourcing talent based on demonstrated technical capability rather than traditional screening.
To widen participation, organisers are offering free preparatory modules covering RL fundamentals, enabling even developers with limited prior exposure to engage meaningfully. The initiative is expected to attract over 70,000 participants, positioning it as one of India’s largest AI-focused hackathons.
Beyond scale, the event underscores a deeper shift: access to frontier AI infrastructure, historically limited to select research labs, is now being opened to a broader developer base. By enabling direct interaction with RL systems and evaluation by global AI leaders, the hackathon aims to accelerate India’s role in building autonomous, learning-based systems. Registrations are open, with the competition set to begin in late March and conclude with the Bengaluru finale in April.




