After the Fabric Foundation Layer 1 (L1) migration, the roadmap focuses on strengthening the robot‑economy stack rather than rushing to scale. Here are the main upcoming directions:2026 priorities (post‑mainnet)Refine robot identity design, task settlement, and structured‑data pipelines to support real‑world use cases across multiple hardware platforms. Ramp up contribution‑based incentives for task execution, data markup, and remote control, so $ROBO rewards are tied to “Proof of Robotic Work”‑style contributions, not just staking. Launch and expand the Robot Skill App Store, enabling developers to publish and monetize reusable robot capabilities on‑chain. 2027–2028 focusMove toward more complex autonomous operations and multi‑robot workflows, while improving reliability and throughput so the network can handle large‑scale deployments. Enhance human‑in‑the‑loop alignment tools and governance mechanisms so the Fabric Foundation can safely coordinate open‑source robot models and protocols. In short, the post‑L1 phase is about hardening the protocol, deepening real‑world usage of $ROBO, and bootstrapping an open‑source robot‑application ecosystem around Fabric Foundation. #robo $ROBO

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