We are currently witnessing one of the most significant shifts in the digital landscape: the rise of the Agentic Web. We are moving from an internet where we interact directly with applications to an internet where we delegate complex tasks to autonomous AI agents.
But here is the critical infrastructure question that keeps me up at night: If millions of AI agents are going to transact, communicate, and collaborate, what is the actual "fabric" holding this economy together?
This is where the Fabric Foundation and its native token $ROBO enter the chat, and frankly, the vision here is massive.
Think of Fabric not just as another blockchain project, but as the dedicated layer for the AI agent economy. It provides the specific infrastructure, the high-speed, low-cost execution layer, where agents can operate independently without human intervention.
Why does this require a specific foundation?
1. Micro-transactions: AI agents will need to make millions of tiny, high-frequency payments (e.g., paying for an API call, buying a dataset, renting computing power). Traditional rails (or even standard L2s) aren't optimized for this sheer volume of micro-transactions between machines.

2. Proof of Intention: How does one AI agent trust another? @Fabric Foundation is building the frameworks to verify agent identities and the outcomes of their work.

3. Economic Primitives: $ROBO isn't just a "meme" or a governance token; it is the actual fuel and currency for these agent-to-agent interactions. It is the standardized unit of account for the agentic economy.

By building on the Fabric Foundation, developers aren't just launching a bot; they are plugging into a fully-fledged economic zone. As we look toward Q2 and Q3, the real catalyst for $ROBO will be the deployment of these agents on mainnet. When you see real-world utility where agents are spending $ROBO to get work done, the value proposition shifts from speculative to essential.
The infrastructure for the next internet is being built right now. It’s decentralized, it’s autonomous, and it’s woven by #ROBO .
What do you think will be the first "killer use case" for AI agents transacting with each other?