For decades, robots have been isolated tools—brilliant at performing specific tasks but completely dependent on human-controlled balance sheets. They could weld a car or vacuum a floor, but they couldn't pay for their own electricity, hire another robot for help, or own their identity. That structural limitation is what the @Fabric Foundation project is solving today

Fabric is building the open economic and coordination layer for the world's first "Robot Economy." By combining a hardware-agnostic operating system (OM1) with a blockchain-native protocol, Fabric gives machines what they have always lacked: a financial identity . Imagine a future where a delivery robot can autonomously pay for a fast-charging station using its own wallet, or where a fleet of warehouse bots from different manufacturers can coordinate tasks and settle payments in real-time without human intervention. This isn't science fiction; this is the infrastructure Fabric is deploying right now .

The fuel for this machine-to-machine economy is **$ROBO **. It’s not just a speculative asset; it’s the utility token used for network fees, staking to coordinate new hardware deployment, and accessing the ecosystem's labor pools . With a recent $20 million funding round led by Pantera Capital and listings on major exchanges, the market is paying attention #robo