#robo $ROBO ROBO is currently live on Base, which is the part I always come back to.
For me, that shows that Fabric cares more about making the system work in the real world than waiting for a perfect setup.
They are pushing operations through existing rails and leaving a cleaner long-term architecture for later. It’s a meaningful choice, as it shows what they really want to validate first.
The highlight is the leak of fees. When a project operates this way early on, some values will slip out of the system before the complete economic cycle is built. Most people look at that and either ignore it or call it a flaw.
I think that reveals even more. It shows that the team is prioritizing execution first — identity, verification, coordination, real-world operations driven by machines — and considers capturing economics something to tighten up later.
That’s why I find ROBO much more interesting than many newly launched products. Not because the topic sounds intriguing, but because the trade-offs are right in front of us.
If Fabric eventually bridges that gap and retains more value within its own network, this early stage will look purposeful. If it can’t, then this whole thing starts to look like a good story built on borrowed infrastructure. $ROBO #ROBO @Fabric Foundation $ROBO
