#robo $ROBO @Fabric Foundation
Fabric caught my attention because it is thinking beyond the robot and focusing on the system around it. Most people talk about smarter machines. Fabric is talking about what happens when those machines need identity, coordination, payments, and accountability in the real world. That feels far more practical to me.
What makes the project interesting right now is the shift from abstract vision to visible movement. In the last few weeks, Fabric Foundation has pushed out its “Own the Robot Economy” framing, introduced $ROBO as the network’s utility and governance asset, opened its airdrop eligibility portal in February, and followed up in March by arguing that robotics now needs infrastructure more than hype. On the market side, ROBO has also started showing up across major venues, including Bitget, Binance, and Kraken, which suggests the project is entering a more public phase.
What I like most is that Fabric does not frame robotics as a spectacle. It frames it as infrastructure. And usually, the teams building the rails matter more than the teams making the loudest noise.
