Fabric Protocol's ROBO token went live for spot trading on Coinbase on February 27, 2026, with Binance Alpha serving as the first platform to feature the token on the same date. The token is the native settlement and governance asset of Fabric Protocol, a network designed to give robots onchain identities, wallets, and the ability to participate in automated labor markets.
What Is Fabric Protocol and What Does ROBO Do?
Fabric Protocol is building what it calls the payment, identity, and capital allocation layer for robotic systems. According to Fabric Protocol, robots deployed in warehouses, hospitals, retail, and delivery currently operate in closed silos.
Each fleet is owned and managed by a single operator, with private capital, internal contracts, and no shared coordination infrastructure. Fabric is trying to replace that model with an open network where robot deployment, task allocation, and settlement happen onchain.
ROBO is the token that makes the network run. It functions as the fee currency for payments, identity verification, and protocol-level transactions. It is also required for staking to access network coordination functions and for governance participation.
The network is initially deployed on Base, the Ethereum Layer 2 developed by Coinbase. Fabric has stated that as adoption grows, it plans to migrate to its own Layer 1 chain.
Where Is ROBO Listed?
Three major exchanges moved on ROBO simultaneously around February 27, 2026.
Coinbase confirmed that spot trading for the ROBO-USD pair was expected to open on or after 5AM PT on February 27, subject to liquidity conditions being met, in supported regions.
Crypto.com enabled deposits for ROBO via ERC-20 and stated it would list the token for trading once liquidity requirements are satisfied. Binance Alpha announced it would be the first platform to feature Fabric Protocol, with eligible users able to claim an airdrop using Binance Alpha Points through the Alpha Events page once trading opened.
How Does the ROBO Tokenomics Work?
The token allocation is structured across seven categories, with vesting schedules designed to delay large unlocks from investor and team wallets while releasing community-facing allocations at Token Generation Event (TGE).
The breakdown is as follows:
Ecosystem and Community: 29.7% with 30% unlocked at TGE and the remainder vesting linearly over 40 months, tied to a Proof of Robotic Work mechanism
Investors: 24.3% subject to a 12-month cliff followed by 36-month linear vesting
Team and Advisors: 20.0% with the same structure as investors: 12-month cliff, 36-month linear vesting
Foundation Reserve: 18.0% with 30% at TGE and the remainder vesting linearly over 40 months
Community Airdrops: 5.0% fully unlocked at TGE
Liquidity Provisioning and Launch: 2.5% fully unlocked at TGE
Public Sale: 0.5% fully unlocked at TGE
The investor and team allocations together represent 44.3% of total supply, but neither wallet sees any tokens for 12 months. The largest single bucket, Ecosystem and Community at 29.7%, introduces the concept of Proof of Robotic Work, which is Fabric's mechanism for distributing rewards based on verified contributions to the network, covering task completion, compute, maintenance, data contributions, and validation.
What Is Proof of Robotic Work?
Proof of Robotic Work is Fabric's on-chain contribution tracking system. Rather than issuing tokens purely based on staking time or voting weight, it ties token rewards to verifiable real-world outcomes: did a robot complete a task, was maintenance logged, was valid data submitted. The concept borrows from proof-of-work in structure but applies it to physical robotic activity rather than computational hashing.
Why Does a Robot Economy Need Blockchain?
Fabric outlines three specific reasons why blockchain infrastructure is necessary for robotic economic participation, and each maps to a concrete technical requirement.
First, robots need a persistent, globally verifiable identity. An onchain registry can track what a robot is, who controls it, what permissions it holds, and its full performance history. That record is auditable and interoperable across operators and legal jurisdictions in a way that a private database is not.
Second, robots need wallets. They cannot open bank accounts, but they can hold cryptographic keys and operate onchain accounts. This enables programmable, autonomous settlement without human intermediaries at each transaction point.
Third, fleet-scale coordination requires transparent, standardized participation rules. Blockchain enables global access to the same participation primitives, rather than limiting robot network access to institutions with the capital and legal infrastructure to negotiate bilateral contracts.
The current fleet model, where a single operator raises private capital, purchases robots, manages operations internally, and settles payments without external visibility, produces fragmentation at scale.
Fabric is proposing decentralized coordination pools where user-deposited stablecoins fund robot deployment, and employers pay for robot labor in ROBO, with a portion of protocol revenue used to acquire ROBO on the open market.
How Does the ROBO Airdrop Work?
The Fabric Foundation opened an eligibility and registration portal from February 20 to February 24, 2026 at 03:00 UTC. The portal covered wallet verification and binding only. Exact allocation amounts and the claim period were to be announced separately.
Eligibility ran across four categories. Participants could qualify through a connected wallet linked on the Fabric Portal or through ecosystem partner wallets such as Kaito and Surf. Eligibility was also available through connected X accounts, Discord accounts, and GitHub accounts. For social account eligibility, participants were required to bind a claim wallet during registration or forfeit their ability to claim later.
A few mechanics are worth noting. Each claim address could only be bound to one X or Discord account. Wallet eligibility was filtered through anti-sybil analysis. Participants also had to select the blockchain network for their claim during registration, and that selection was final.
Conclusion
Fabric Protocol is a network built to give robots onchain identities, autonomous wallets, and a programmable labor market infrastructure. ROBO serves as the settlement currency and governance token across that system, with a token allocation that delays the largest institutional unlocks by 12 months while releasing community-facing supply at TGE.
The Proof of Robotic Work mechanism ties ecosystem rewards to verified real-world robotic activity rather than passive holding. The network launches on Base before a planned migration to a dedicated Layer 1 as deployment scales.