Many people still do not understand what exactly ROBO is, so let me try to explain in a simple way (maybe with a bit of clumsy English, but you'll get the gist ๐Ÿ˜…). Here are my 35 points available on Alpha Account, which I managed to get 888 ROBO.

ROBO is the main utility and governance token of the Fabric Foundation. Their big mission is what they call 'Owning the Robotic Economy.' This means that in the future, when robots are working everywhere on the streets, in warehouses, hospitals, factories โ€” people should not be left behind. We need a system that connects humans and machines in an open and verifiable way.

As the Fabric network builds safe, universal robots, they say that society needs to have the infrastructure to align human and machine interests. This is where ROBO comes in. It aligns incentives and allows people to participate in the entire ecosystem.

Let's break this down slowly.

1. Network Fees โ€“ Payments, Identification, and Verification

In the future, robots will be autonomous. They won't be able to go to the bank and open an account like you and I can. They also cannot hold a passport. So how does a robot get paid if it cleans your office or delivers food?

Answer: on-chain wallet.

Robots will use web3 wallets funded by cryptocurrency. They will have on-chain identity, so each task and payment can be tracked transparently.

All transaction fees within the Fabric network will be paid using ROBO.

For example:

A delivery robot completes 100 deliveries in one day.

Each customer payment is completed in the chain.

Each transaction fee is paid in ROBO.

Initially, the Fabric network will launch on Base (Ethereum L2). But as adoption increases and robots become more active, Fabric plans to migrate and become its own layer 1 blockchain. Thus, all economic value from robot activity will remain within their chain and strengthen demand for ROBO.

2. Coordination of robots through crowdsourcing

This part confuses many people.

The protocol allows decentralized coordination for activating robot hardware. But you must stake ROBO to participate.

Let's say a new fleet of robots wants to launch in Paris or New York. People stake ROBO tokens as units of participation. By doing this, they help coordinate the network's initialization.

But it is very important:

This does NOT mean you own a robot.

You do not own the hardware.

You do not receive a share of the income.

You do not receive equity ownership.

You only gain access to the protocol's functionality and priority task distribution in early operational stages.

So an example:

1,000 users staking ROBO

The network is launching

Early tasks are distributed

Users with higher participation weight get priority access

Additionally, part of the protocol's income will be used to buy ROBO on the open market. This will create constant buying pressure over time.

To join the coordination? You must stake ROBO. Simple.

3. Ecosystem Participant Onboarding

As the Fabric ecosystem grows, developers and companies will want to create applications based on the robot network.

Imagine this:

Startup creating a security system for robots

Another company creating a warehouse automation panel

Developer creating a skill marketplace for robots

They all must buy and stake a fixed amount of ROBO to access the network and robot teams.

This aligns incentives. If the network is successful, the token's value will increase, so builders are motivated to develop the ecosystem correctly.

Rewards are subsequently paid for verified contributions, such as:

Skill Development

Task Completion

Data Contribution

Computing Power

Validation Services

Everything is structured around staking and participation primitives, such as priority access.

4. Governance โ€“ Shaping an Autonomous Future

Fabric believes that an autonomous future should benefit all of humanity, not just a few corporations.

Thus, ROBO is also a governance token.

Holders can help make decisions:

Network Fees

Operational Policies

Important updates

Ecosystem Direction

The Fund carefully designs the token distribution to:

1. Funding long-term growth of the ecosystem

2. Maintain the Fund's financial stability for network management

3. Coordinate early participants and supporters through structured distribution

This prevents early sell-offs and encourages long-term building.

As we complete

Simply put, ROBO is not just a random crypto token. It is designed to support the entire infrastructure of the robot economy:

Pay the fees

Coordinate robots

Allow developers to join

Manage the network

As robots become more capable and are all around us, such a system may become necessary. Without a level of coordination between humans and machines, the future could become chaotic.

So, Fabric is trying to create an open network of robots where anyone can participate โ€” but access is achieved through $ROBO staking and usage.

This is the core idea $ROBO