Drupal Association blog: DrupalCon Lands in Japan: Historic Momentum as Drupal Eyes Its Next Chapter

Drupal Canvas, the much-hyped new page builder from Acquia and built with contributions from agencies and the broader community, does exactly that.For the full DrupalCon Asia schedule and session details, visit the official DrupalCon website.
“More people are contributing to Drupal than ever, especially to strategic initiatives,” he said. “If we can keep it up, great things will happen.”

A marketplace on Drupal.org will let users browse and install templates for specific use cases. An MVP is expected in 2026, with 10-15 partners committed to building initial templates.

Drupal Canvas: Solving the 20-Year Problem

Mayor Gen Nakagawa welcomed attendees with a goal to make Nara “the most Drupal friendly city in the world.” Half the attendees are from Japan.
The tool balances competing needs: locking down certain elements to maintain brand consistency and accessibility, while providing flexibility for experts who need creative control.
Drupal needs to market itself against proprietary platforms with enormous marketing budgets. How this is achieved is a challenge for the open source project.
His argument centers on fit: Drupal’s structured content, versioning capabilities, and workflow management – features that have made it more complex for beginners – are exactly what AI needs to be reliable and reversible.
At DrupalCon Vienna, Dries demonstrated AI generating complete landing pages from single prompts – potentially reducing what might take 300 clicks to around 30.

AI as Competitive Advantage

DrupalCon Asia continues through November 20.
Dries said he’s heard consistently from organizations large and small: “We need an easier page builder.”
Despite packed conference sessions, Dries identified a critical challenge: “Outside, the word hasn’t got out there. How do we get the message out to the millions of web developers who have an outdated view of Drupal?”
“Even an expert can take days or weeks to build a Drupal site,” Dries explained. “Site templates remove that learning curve.”
Dries and Pam on stage in Nara
Dries Buytaert and Pamela Barrone on stage in Nara, Japan. 
Site templates build on Drupal’s recipe system, bundling modules, configuration, Drupal Canvas themes, and demo content into ready-to-use websites.

Site Templates to Collapse the Learning Curve

The Drupal AI initiative now includes 25 partner organizations contributing staff time, with 1,300 people in the Slack channel.
The State of New York, with 140 Drupal websites and over 300 content creators, is already evaluating how Drupal Canvas will enable them to build pages while maintaining accessibility standards and brand compliance.
Each initiative has the potential to transform Drupal individually, Dries argued. Together, “the compounding of these ideas will be transformational.”

The Marketing Gap

“It actually makes building pages fun,” Barrone said during the session.
Nara, Japan – Drupal founder Dries Buytaert declared a “historic moment” for the platform at DrupalCon Asia today, pointing to four major initiatives running simultaneously that he says will transform Drupal: Drupal CMS 2.0 (launching early 2026), Drupal Canvas, site templates and marketplace, and the Drupal AI program.
“For non-developers, Drupal hasn’t been easy to use – AI can help fix that. It can help us overcome our weaknesses and elevate our strengths,” he said. “Our competitors don’t have the same structural strengths, and that makes Drupal uniquely placed.”

January 2026 and Beyond

The conference, the first DrupalCon in Japan, reflects Drupal’s growing presence in Asia-Pacific. Tim Doyle, CEO of the Drupal Association, noted that the region accounts for 32% of Drupal.org traffic, one-third of project activity, and 24% of top contributors.
“For 20 years people have been saying Drupal is too hard to build pages with. We are changing that,” Dries said during a keynote Q&A with Pamela Barrone, CTO of Technocrat and Product Owner of Drupal CMS.
“We can’t ignore how it’s changing pretty much everything we do – it’s changing how people use websites, how they build websites, and how we create content.”
DrupalCon Asia in Nara, Japan
Caption: DrupalCon Asia in Nara, Japan. Flickr image by: Jakub Piasecki, CC BY-SA 4.0

When asked about the decision to start the Drupal CMS project, he acknowledged initial uncertainty: “I was nervous making this announcement 18 months ago – it’s not easy to create that momentum.”

DrupalCon Asia in Nara

Success metrics include increased installs, more contributors, more people in leadership roles, and sustained innovation across strategic initiatives.
His three-to-five year vision focuses entirely on growth: “Everything I’m trying to help with is all about growth. Marketing, Canvas, AI – it’s all about growing Drupal.”
He emphasized this responsibility extends to the whole community: “We need everyone to change the mindset of millions of people around the world.”
Dries made a pragmatic case for AI integration, acknowledging mixed feelings in the community while arguing Drupal can’t afford to ignore it:

Similar Posts