Connected Apps

Linear

Keep product and engineering work moving.

Connect Linear so MoClaw can search issues, create and update tickets, add comments, upload files, inspect teams, projects, cycles, labels, workflow states, and releases. It is built for agent workflows that need to turn messy conversation into organized product work.

How it works

3 steps to wire up Linear, no engineering required.

  1. 1

    Connect your Linear workspace

    Authorize MoClaw from Settings so it can access Linear with your user permissions.

  2. 2

    Describe the work

    Ask MoClaw to create an issue, find related tickets, update a release, or turn a discussion into an engineering checklist.

  3. 3

    Review the result

    MoClaw returns the created or updated Linear items with enough context to verify what changed.

Why it matters

Linear is where fast teams track what actually needs to happen. The challenge is that work often begins somewhere else: a Slack thread, a GitHub review, a customer note, a meeting summary, or a vague request in chat.

With Linear connected, MoClaw can translate that context into clean issues, find the right existing ticket, update status, add comments, attach evidence, and organize work into cycles, projects, or releases. It is useful for PMs and engineers who want fewer tabs open and fewer context switches between discussion and execution.

The integration is action-oriented. MoClaw can browse the Linear catalog when it needs to discover teams or workflow states, then use the right action with the right identifiers instead of asking you to hand-build payloads.

Try saying

Real prompts you can paste into Linear.

  • Create a Linear issue from this bug report and assign it to the frontend team.
  • Find open issues related to connector OAuth failures and summarize the current status.
  • Move the resolved checkout bugs into the next release and leave a comment with the evidence.
  • Turn this product note into three Linear tickets with clear acceptance criteria.

Step by step demo

What actually happens when you send the prompt.

Prompt 01 4 steps

“Turn this product note into three Linear tickets with clear acceptance criteria.”

What MoClaw does

  1. 1 Extracts the user problem, constraints, and requested behavior from the note.
  2. 2 Finds the correct Linear team and available workflow states.
  3. 3 Creates three scoped issues with titles, descriptions, labels, and acceptance criteria.
  4. 4 Returns the issue links and a short summary of the split.
Result

You get three Linear issues: 'Connector source filtering', 'OAuth recovery copy', and 'Settings modal empty state', each with acceptance criteria and product context.

Prompt 02 4 steps

“Find open issues related to connector OAuth failures and summarize the current status.”

What MoClaw does

  1. 1 Searches Linear issues using connector and OAuth terms.
  2. 2 Filters out closed or unrelated tickets.
  3. 3 Groups matching issues by team, status, and severity.
  4. 4 Produces a short status report with links.
Result

MoClaw reports: '5 open issues. 2 are high-priority GitHub reconnect bugs, 1 is a Sentry MCP OAuth grant issue, and 2 are copy or settings polish.'

FAQ

Quick answers about pricing, privacy, and limits.

What Linear objects can MoClaw work with?
The connector covers issues, comments, teams, projects, cycles, labels, workflow states, releases, release pipelines, release issue links, file uploads, and webhooks.
Does MoClaw act as me in Linear?
Yes. Actions use your connected Linear authorization, so workspace permissions still apply.
Can it update existing issues?
Yes. MoClaw can search for existing issues, update fields, add comments, claim issues, and organize them into release workflows.
Can it connect GitHub and Linear workflows?
Yes. When both are connected, MoClaw can use GitHub evidence to draft or update Linear work items.

Try MoClaw free.

1,000 credits a month, or bring your own key for unlimited usage.

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