The next wave of crypto utility is not just about DeFi or memecoins – it is about giving robots and AI agents a native place in the global economy. @Fabric Foundation is building an open coordination layer where robots can have on-chain identities, autonomous wallets, and verifiable task markets, instead of sitting as isolated hardware controlled only by big institutions.
At the center of this network is $ROBO

The core utility and governance asset that powers payments, staking, and decision-making across the Fabric ecosystem. Employers and applications pay for robot labor in $ROBO, while builders and operators stake it to gain access, align incentives, and earn rewards for verified robotic work through mechanisms like Proof of Robotic Work. This means robot fleets cleaning cities, moving goods, or running inspections can settle their contributions on-chain, with transparent fee flows and long-term, programmatic incentives.
What makes Fabric Foundation’s approach unique is that it treats robots as autonomous economic participants without legal personhood, using decentralized governance and on-chain rules to coordinate how capital is allocated, how fleets are deployed, and how value is shared with the broader community. As real-world automation scales, #ROBO is positioned as the settlement and coordination layer that connects developers, operators, and intelligent machines into one programmable “robot economy” that anyone can join, not just large corporations.