@Fabric Foundation I was at my desk before sunrise, coffee cooling beside a noisy laptop fan, rereading Fabric’s notes because this question keeps nagging me: if robots start doing real work, what actually holds the system together? What makes $ROBO interesting to me is that it is framed less as a badge and more as operating plumbing. Fabric says the token is meant to settle network fees for payments, identity, verification, data exchange, compute, and API calls, while operators post work bonds that can be slashed for fraud or poor performance. Holders can also lock tokens for governance signals on fees and protocol rules. That mix feels timely right now. Fabric introduced $ROBO in late February, and trading went live in early March, so attention is naturally rising. I still think execution is the hard part, but the design points toward a useful question: can token utility stay tied to robotic service instead of drifting into abstraction?
@Fabric Foundation $ROBO #ROBO #robo