Brothers, today we won't talk about the market; the mouse wants to share the journey of writing about $ROBO over the past half month.

[Writing Experience: From Doubt to Belief]

At the end of February, when I first wrote $ROBO , the mouse actually carried the instinct of skepticism from accounting—Is this another AI narrative? Is this another DePIN project? After a few calculations, I found something was off.

The project team is too strong: Stanford professor Jan Liphardt, CTO from MIT CSAIL + Google DeepMind, Pantera leading with 20 million, and Coinbase Ventures, DCG, Sequoia China following up. This lineup is top-notch in the AI + Crypto field, not that kind of 'two programmers + a white paper' wild team.

What surprises me even more is that the product is already running: the OM1 operating system is open source and compatible with robots from multiple manufacturers such as Yushu Technology and UBTECH; the shared charging pile network has connected 2,300 devices, and the AI training market nodes exceed 8,000. This is not just talk; real work is being done.

[Creative experience: the more you write, the more substantial it becomes]

In the past half month, I have shifted from "wait and see" to "getting on board", from "digging background" to "focusing on data". The biggest realization is: good projects speak for themselves; you just need to keep the accounts clear.

Binance will list ROBO spot trading on March 5, with a seed label; OKX will follow on the same day. The two major exchanges are sequentially getting on board, optimizing the liquidity structure. Today's price is $0.04, down 15.66%, but the trading volume is 167 million — the more it falls, the more volume it has, indicating that someone is accumulating.

Airdrop claims end on March 13, brothers who meet the criteria don't forget to check. Circulation is 22.25%, and the chip structure is relatively healthy.

[Development prospects: where will the abacus beads be moved]

Looking ahead, the pricing logic of ROBO will shift from "narrative-driven" to "utility-driven". The core focuses on three points:

Real machine workload: currently, daily task calls exceed 25,000 times, with an average completion rate of 98.7%. Once this number breaks 100,000, the fundamentals will be stable.

Token consumption mechanism: operators must stake ROBO to obtain task allocation rights, this mechanism creates stable demand. Coupled with a penalty design of 5%-50%, it forms implicit deflation.

Cross-chain progress: planning to launch the mainnet migration in Q3 2026. If it can truly connect multiple chains, liquidity will reach a new level.

[Honest words from me]

In writing about $ROBO this past half month, my biggest gain is not about the rise or fall, but witnessing a project move from "concept" to "implementation". The robot's "payroll" is turning into real on-chain transactions; the calculations are getting more interesting.

With an abacus in hand, continue to monitor the data. When do you think the robot economy will start to run?

ROBO
ROBO
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#ROBO