
I think the concept behind Fabric is powerful.
A decentralized system for verification, coordination, and accountability in robotics is exactly the kind of infrastructure the AI era may eventually need.
But strong concepts often fail when incentives are weak.
That is why I believe the long-term future of $ROBO depends on four things:
First, participation must remain broad enough to support real decentralization.
Second, incentives must reward useful behavior without creating unhealthy token inflation.
Third, governance must remain credible, especially when real machine activity and economic coordination are involved.
Fourth, the protocol needs visible adoption. If developers, operators, and machine networks actually use the system, then the thesis becomes much stronger.
This is what I will be watching.
Not just whether ROBO gets attention, but whether Fabric can make verification economically useful and structurally durable.
If it can, then this project may have more staying power than many people expect.

