Don't just listen to marketing; let's talk data about the Fabric Protocol. Backed by @Fabric Foundation and relying on OpenMind (which has received $20 million in funding from Pantera and others), we are creating a universal robot open network. The core is verifiable computation + native infrastructure for agents, addressing the problems of isolated machines and trust.

Technology doesn't deceive: deployed on Ethereum L2 Base, EVM compatible; each robot has an on-chain DID identity, task execution comes with encrypted signatures, and results are verifiable across the network, with maximum tampering costs. The public ledger consolidates data, computing power, and regulation, while a modular architecture lowers development barriers, ensuring human-machine collaboration is based on safety.

The $ROBO economy is very clear: a total supply of 10 billion tokens, 29.7% for the ecological community, 24.3% for investors, 20% for the team, 18% for the foundation reserve, with clear locking rules (December cliff + 36-month linear release), and manageable selling pressure. The public sale will transfer 0.5% at a valuation of $400 million, raising $2 million, with TGE fully released, and early circulation being transparent.

Incentives are real: contributing computing power, datasets, and robot skills automatically settle $ROBO on-chain, without intermediaries cutting in. Part of the protocol income is used for market buybacks, forming a positive cycle. Compared to vaporware projects, it has real robot collaboration scenarios, on-chain data is verifiable, and financing and token distribution are fully transparent.

Not just blowing disruption, but talking about implementation: Fabric makes robot collaboration transparent from a black box, anchoring real utility. This is what Web3 + robots should look like.