When Token Distribution Becomes Infrastructure
Most projects consider token distribution as a marketing event. The airdrop is completed, tokens are spread, and then the network begins to operate.
However, the launch of ROBO presents a slightly different approach. Before trading is truly stable, the Fabric Foundation opened an official claim portal that allows eligible users to directly take their tokens from the network. This portal opened on February 27 and provided time until mid-March for participants to complete their claims.
At a glance, this looks like a standard distribution procedure. However, the claim mechanism actually has a deeper function. It maps out who the early participants are in the economic robot network being built.
In a coordination system like Fabric, distribution is not just about who holds the tokens. It also determines who has the initial voice in governance and who can directly interact with the network when robotic activities begin to emerge.
If robots someday truly become economic actors, then token distribution is not just about distributing wealth. It becomes a distribution of access to infrastructure.
Tokens are often seen as market instruments. But in contexts like this, they also serve as an early map of the community that will operate the network.
@Fabric Foundation #ROBO $ROBO


