Fabric Foundation is trying to build an open robot economy where physical robots and AI agents can coordinate work, identity, and payments on-chain instead of living inside closed corporate silos. That is where $ROBO comes in: it is the native token that powers transactions, rewards contribution, and aligns all the different players in the network, from hardware builders to data providers and node operators. When a robot or agent plugs into Fabric, it can use $ROBO to pay for computation, settle tasks, and participate in governance, which means real network usage can translate into real token demand over time. I like that this model treats robots as economic actors with verifiable histories rather than just remote-controlled tools, and it gives the community a way to co-own the infrastructure that will likely run a big part of future automation. As more projects experiment with putting real-world robot workloads on Fabric, I will be watching how $ROBO is used across staking, incentives, and fees to understand where the long-term value flows. @PROJECT_HANDLE $ROBO #ROBO