@Fabric Foundation $ROBO #ROBO

Fabric Protocol is one of the clearest bets on a machine-native economy I’ve seen. The core idea is not just “robots on crypto,” but open infrastructure for turning robots into verifiable economic actors: machines with identity, payment rails, coordination logic, and governance, all anchored to public ledgers instead of closed corporate stacks. Its architecture is what makes the thesis credible. Fabric pairs an open, hardware-agnostic robotics OS with an onchain coordination layer for identity, shared context, secure multi-agent communication, task settlement, and oversight. In practice, that means robots are meant to do more than execute commands, they are meant to participate in an economy where work, data, and contribution can be measured, verified, and rewarded. 

That is where ROBO becomes important. It is not framed as a decorative governance token, but as the protocol’s working asset: used for fees, identity and verification activity, settlement, access, staking for coordination, and governance signaling through veROBO. Fabric’s economic design is also more thoughtful than the usual token template. The whitepaper describes adaptive emissions, structural demand sinks, work bonds, slashing, and a rewards model tied to verified robotic work rather than passive capital alone. The supply is fixed at 10 billion, with 29.7% allocated to ecosystem and community, 24.3% to investors, 20.0% to team and advisors, 18.0% to foundation reserve, 5.0% to community airdrops, 2.5% to liquidity and launch, and 0.5% to public sale. That mix tells you Fabric is trying to fund a long buildout while keeping enough float and incentives to bootstrap usage