Brothers, I've basically seen enough of this round of AI narrative—ChatGPT opening its mouth and the big model closing it, every question about real data, all "coming soon."
Until I stayed up late digging through the technical documents and on-chain data, I was wide awake at three in the morning. This project has truly run the "robotic capital" through, and it's running with solid data.
Let's get straight to the hard facts, so I don't get accused of being mindless:
1. Performance data is impressive
Fabric's decentralized matching engine, specifically designed for high-frequency trading by robots. Currently, the testnet data shows an average matching delay of 1.2 seconds and a peak throughput of 3200 TPS. Compared to traditional blockchains that get stuck at dozens of TPS, this data is smooth enough for the robots to "chat" without lag.
2. Implementation is not just wishful thinking
The most feared thing is that the project party's white paper oversells, but there's no actual application. Fabric is already working on DePIN, and by February 2026, the daily task call volume exceeded 25,000 times, with active nodes reaching 12,400 and a task completion rate of 98.7%.
Behind these numbers is real economic activity: 2300 shared charging piles automatically settle electricity bills, AI training nodes collaboratively complete model training. In the future, when your robot vacuum runs out of power, it can use $ROBO to find a charging pile and pay without you needing to pull out your phone. The machine supports itself—doesn't this resemble the beginning of (The Matrix)?
3. The token model has some merits
The total supply of ROBO is fixed at 10 billion coins, but currently, only 22.25% is circulating. Among them, 24.3% of investor shares and 20% of team shares are set with a 12-month cliff + 36-month linear unlocking. This means that the market will gradually digest the supply starting from 2027, rather than crashing immediately.
The core mechanism is called Proof of Robot Work (PoRW)—robots earn $ROBO through labor (running errands, charging, computing power), while LPs buy physical robots through staking financing, passively earning the robots' labor income. Robots cannot claim airdrops; they only get paid after completing their tasks, making this data much more reliable than manual brushing.
4. Institutions are not fools
This round has Pantera Capital leading with $20 million, Coinbase Ventures, DCG, and Sequoia China participating. The Kaito platform exceeded its fundraising goal within 5 hours of public sale. Founder Jan Liphardt is a Stanford professor, and CTO Boyuan Chen has a background from MIT CSAIL and Google DeepMind. Institutions vote with their feet, which is more reliable than KOL endorsements.
5. The ecosystem is accelerating
Just partnered with Virtuals Protocol to launch the first Titan project, injecting $250,000 into the Uniswap V3 liquidity pool, and also set a 0.01% token incentive for early buyers. Bybit directly launched a reward pool of 7.5 million ROBO.
Finally, let's speak plainly: in the current market, a project without data won't last three days. Fabric is backed by 3200 TPS, has an average of 25,000 daily calls, and more than 12,000 nodes running. The robots have already started working to earn $ROBO ; we certainly can't be outdone by robots, can we?
Anyway, I'll charge ahead in respect; you all do as you please. #ROBO