$ROBO I have gone through the materials of @Fabric Foundation again in the past two days, and the more I look at it, the more I feel it’s not the old routine of riding the “AI + Robotics” wave. The most powerful statement Fabric makes is actually transforming robots from “tools” into “economic participants”—not just workers, but capable of taking on tasks, receiving payments, validating, and maintaining identity; the entire on-chain settlement logic is geared towards this direction. On February 24, the official account released two pieces of content, one directly shouting “Own the Robot Economy,” and the other clearly stating the use of $ROBO : payments, identity, and validation of these network fees all rely on it, initially deploying on Base, with the later goal of migrating to its own L1. The intention is quite clear; it aims not to be just a conceptual coin, but rather the settlement layer of the robot economy.
What’s more critical is that the market has recently indeed given it some heat, not just hype. Binance has already launched Fabric Protocol (ROBO) on March 4, along with Seed Tag; on the same day, it connected the entries for Earn, Buy Crypto, Convert, VIP Loan, and Margin, indicating that the platform is providing not just single-point exposure, but a complete set of liquidity support. By March 10, the ROBO price was around $0.046, with a circulation of approximately 2.23 billion coins, a market cap of about $100 million, and a 24-hour trading volume still in the range of $65 million to $84 million, indicating that the heat hasn’t completely dropped.
The most attractive aspect of ROBO now is that the narrative of “robot income on-chain” finally has a tradable target; the most dangerous part is that this narrative is still early, with prices running ahead, and whether real robot network income can catch up is something to watch closely. For me, @Fabric Foundation is worth keeping an eye on, not because it has already succeeded, but because it has, for the first time, articulated the concept of “robots working, on-chain revenue sharing” to a market-gradable extent. This project will either genuinely become the underlying layer of the robot economy or be treated by the market as a high-level concept. I will continue to watch it closely but won’t blindly chase after it.
@Fabric Foundation $ROBO
#ROBO
What’s more critical is that the market has recently indeed given it some heat, not just hype. Binance has already launched Fabric Protocol (ROBO) on March 4, along with Seed Tag; on the same day, it connected the entries for Earn, Buy Crypto, Convert, VIP Loan, and Margin, indicating that the platform is providing not just single-point exposure, but a complete set of liquidity support. By March 10, the ROBO price was around $0.046, with a circulation of approximately 2.23 billion coins, a market cap of about $100 million, and a 24-hour trading volume still in the range of $65 million to $84 million, indicating that the heat hasn’t completely dropped.
The most attractive aspect of ROBO now is that the narrative of “robot income on-chain” finally has a tradable target; the most dangerous part is that this narrative is still early, with prices running ahead, and whether real robot network income can catch up is something to watch closely. For me, @Fabric Foundation is worth keeping an eye on, not because it has already succeeded, but because it has, for the first time, articulated the concept of “robots working, on-chain revenue sharing” to a market-gradable extent. This project will either genuinely become the underlying layer of the robot economy or be treated by the market as a high-level concept. I will continue to watch it closely but won’t blindly chase after it.
@Fabric Foundation $ROBO
#ROBO