OpenMind, the Leader in the Robotics Track, is About to TGE: Is the $400 Million Valuation New Token Sale Worth Participating In?

Odaily星球日报Publicado em 2026-01-25Última atualização em 2026-01-25

Resumo

OpenMind, a leading robotics company, is set to conduct a Token Generation Event (TGE) for its native token ROBO on the Kaito platform. With a fully diluted valuation (FDV) of $400 million, the token sale aims to raise $2 million, representing 0.5% of the total token supply. The public sale begins on January 26 at 8 PM Beijing Time, with a per-address investment limit of $1,000 to $250,000 and tokens fully unlocked at TGE. Founded by Stanford professor Jan Liphardt, OpenMind is developing a universal operating system and decentralized network for intelligent machines, enabling global collaboration between robots. It has received backing from major investors like Pantera Capital, Coinbase Ventures, and DCG, and was recognized among the top 100 robotics startups of 2025. Notably, NVIDIA's Robotics division has shared OpenMind's content, indicating close ties. The project operates alongside the Fabric Foundation, an independent entity managing the protocol’s governance and ecosystem. The ROBO token sale includes a 40% priority allocation for partner communities, with the remaining 60% open to the general public. However, the $400 million FDV is considered high compared to similar AI and robotics projects like Virtuals ($540M), Sentient ($200M), and Grass ($127M). Concerns include unclear tokenomics and potential sell pressure from early investors if institutional tokens are unlocked at TGE, making the offering less attractive despite strong backing.

Original | Odaily Planet Daily (@OdailyChina)

Author | Asher (@Asher_ 0210)

On January 23, the official Foundation account of OpenMind, the leader in the robotics track, Fabric Foundation, posted on platform X that its native token ROBO will soon undergo a token sale on the Kaito platform.

Below, Odaily Planet Daily will take you through understanding the robotics track leader OpenMind, its relationship with the Fabric Foundation, and the details of the new token sale.

OpenMind: Building a Universal Operating System for Intelligent Machines and a Decentralized Collaboration Network

OpenMind was founded by Stanford University Professor Jan Liphardt. It is dedicated to building a universal operating system for intelligent machines and a decentralized collaboration network, enabling robots from different manufacturers and of different forms to securely trust each other, share information, and collaborate on a global scale. Furthermore, OpenMind was successfully selected as one of the Top 100 Global Robotics Startups in 2025.

It is worth mentioning that NVIDIA Robotics' official account reposted a robot testing video from OpenMind, and the two parties have close business dealings.

NVIDIA Robotics official account reposts OpenMind's tweet

In early August this year, OpenMind announced the completion of a $20 million funding round, led by Pantera Capital, with participation from Ribbit, Sequoia, Coinbase Ventures, DCG, Lightspeed Faction, Anagram, Pi Network Ventures, Topology, Primitive Ventures, Amber Group, and several other institutions and renowned angel investors.

The Relationship Between OpenMind and Fabric

OpenMind is the founding team and core developer of the Fabric protocol, and also a core contributor and initiator of the Fabric Foundation. Fabric was initially designed and developed by the OpenMind team, responsible for the core technical architecture and early implementation of the protocol.

As the project developed, to prevent the protocol from being controlled by a single company and to achieve a more open and neutral governance structure, OpenMind spun off the governance, economic model, and community coordination functions of Fabric to establish an independent non-profit organization, the Fabric Foundation. This foundation is responsible for the long-term maintenance, standard setting, ecosystem incentives, and global coordination of the protocol, promoting the sustainable development of Fabric.

Currently, OpenMind continues to participate in the construction of the Fabric protocol as a core contributor. Its official introduction also clearly states "We’re a core contributor of @FabricFND". Meanwhile, the community branding has been unified towards Fabric, including the renaming of Discord and the unified narrative of the protocol and the ROBO token, further strengthening Fabric's position as the main brand.

OpenMind's official Discord renamed to Fabric

Fabric New Token Sale Details

According to official information, the native token of the Fabric protocol, ROBO, will undergo a token sale on the Kaito platform. The specific details for participation are as follows:

  • Sale Start Time: January 26th, 8:00 PM Beijing Time;
  • Valuation: $400 million FDV;
  • Fundraising Target: $2 million;
  • Sale Proportion: 0.5% of the total supply of ROBO tokens;
  • Unlock Situation: 100% unlocked at TGE;
  • Single Address Subscription Limit: Minimum $1,000, Maximum $250,000;
  • Expected TGE Time: Q1 2026 (specific date not announced).

Additionally, 40% of the total public sale allocation on the Kaito platform is Priority Allocation, dedicated to partner communities:

  • Fabric Foundation community (based on past participation, holders of Platinum/Emerald/Diamond tier, OG, Developer, Backpack, Researcher badges, etc.): 15%;
  • Kaito AI community (sKAITO holders, etc.): 10%;
  • Virtuals community (holders of >100 veVIRTUAL): 5%;
  • Surf AI community (Pro/Max annual subscribers or NFT Pass holders): 5%;
  • Other Kaito referral programs: 5%.

The remaining 60% of the new token sale allocation is the public portion (for general eligible users).

The $400 Million Valuation for the New Sale Offers Less Than Ideal Value

From a valuation comparison perspective, OpenMind's token ROBO is priced at a $400 million FDV, significantly higher than the reasonable range for comparable projects in the same track that have already issued tokens. For reference, among related projects in the AI robotics sector, Virtuals currently has a market cap of approximately $540 million, Sentient around $200 million, and Grass around $127 million. ROBO's starting valuation is already on the high side.

Although OpenMind has backing from top-tier investment firms like Pantera Capital, Coinbase Ventures, and DCG, providing some endorsement for the project, the detailed token economics for ROBO have not yet been released. Particularly, the unlock ratio for institutional investors at TGE remains unclear.

If institutions have liquid supply at TGE, combined with the 100% unlock of the public sale portion, it could create significant dual selling pressure, putting pressure on the early price trend. Given this uncertainty, the pricing of the new sale at a $400 million FDV offers less than ideal overall value.

Perguntas relacionadas

QWhat is OpenMind and what does it aim to build?

AOpenMind is a leader in the robotics sector, founded by Stanford Professor Jan Liphardt. It aims to build a universal operating system and a decentralized collaboration network for intelligent machines, enabling robots from different manufacturers to securely share information and work together globally.

QWhat is the relationship between OpenMind and the Fabric Foundation?

AOpenMind is the founding team and core developer of the Fabric protocol. To avoid centralized control and promote open governance, OpenMind spun off the protocol's governance and economic model to form the independent, non-profit Fabric Foundation. OpenMind remains a core contributor to the ongoing development of the Fabric protocol.

QWhat are the key details of the ROBO token sale on the Kaito platform?

AThe ROBO token sale on Kaito has a fully diluted valuation (FDV) of $400 million. It aims to raise $2 million, representing 0.5% of the total token supply. The sale begins on January 26th at 8 PM Beijing Time. Tokens are 100% unlocked at TGE, with a per-address purchase limit of $1,000 to $250,000. The TGE is expected in Q1 2026.

QWhy does the article suggest the $400 million FDV valuation offers suboptimal value for participants?

AThe article suggests the $400 million FDV is suboptimal because it is significantly higher than the current market capitalizations of comparable projects in the AI and robotics sector, such as Virtuals ($540M), Sentient (~$200M), and Grass (~$127M). Furthermore, the lack of transparency regarding the tokenomics and the potential for early selling pressure from both the publicly sold tokens (100% unlocked) and possibly institutional investors could negatively impact the token's early price action.

QWhich major investors participated in OpenMind's funding round?

AOpenMind raised $20 million in a funding round led by Pantera Capital. Other participants included Ribbit, Sequoia Capital, Coinbase Ventures, DCG, Lightspeed Faction, Anagram, Pi Network Ventures, Topology, Primitive Ventures, and Amber Group.

Leituras Relacionadas

The AI Agent Era Accelerates Its Arrival: Questflow Defines a New Paradigm of Financial Intelligence with On-Chain AI Brokerage

The AI Agent era is accelerating, with the CB Insights AI 100 list highlighting global investment confidence. The focus has shifted from whether AI works to its speed of deployment and ability to manage complex workflows, with autonomous AI Agents driving this transformation. At the forefront is Questflow, a Singapore-based startup redefining financial intelligence through its on-chain AI brokerage. Unlike tools that merely provide data dashboards, Questflow deploys AI Agents that proactively scan markets, form judgments, and execute trades via a conversational interface—operating 24/7 without requiring manual confirmation for each decision. This embodies the new AI paradigm of agents capable of executing multi-step workflows autonomously. Questflow's mission is to democratize institutional-grade trading intelligence. Historically reserved for the ultra-wealthy, this capability is now accessible starting from just $1 through Questflow's "AI Clone + Copy Trade" model. The platform charges only a 1% execution fee, aligning its incentives directly with users and eliminating traditional management or performance fees. The timing is opportune, aligning with key trends identified by CB Insights: the scalable deployment of AI Agents, accelerated AI adoption in financial services, and the maturation of on-chain infrastructure. With robust liquidity on platforms like Hyperliquid and Polymarket, alongside advancements in AI reasoning and non-custodial wallet security, Questflow is positioned to merge the roles of broker, fund, and exchange into a single, accessible platform for millions.

链捕手Há 19m

The AI Agent Era Accelerates Its Arrival: Questflow Defines a New Paradigm of Financial Intelligence with On-Chain AI Brokerage

链捕手Há 19m

Why Pricing Social Interactions is Doomed to Fail?

Titled "Why Putting a Price on Social Interaction Is Doomed to Fail," this article critiques attempts to monetize social networks directly through SocialFi models, arguing their inevitable failure stems from a fundamental misunderstanding of media dynamics. Using Marshall McLuhan's theory of "hot" and "cold" media, the author posits that social networks are inherently "cold" media. Their value isn't contained in individual posts but is co-created through user participation, interpretation, and fragmented, ongoing interaction (e.g., replies, shares). This ambiguity and need for user involvement are core to their function. The article asserts that SocialFi projects like Friend.tech failed because introducing real-time, tradable financial pricing (a definitive "hot" signal) into this "cold" environment doesn't add a layer—it replaces the medium's essence. The unambiguous price signal overshadows and nullifies the nuanced, participatory social signal. Users become traders, not participants, and when speculative profits vanish, the underlying social ecosystem—never genuinely cultivated—collapses entirely. This principle extends beyond crypto. The author argues platforms like Twitter have gradually "heated up" through metrics (likes, retweets counts, algorithmically defined value), shifting users from participants to performers and eroding organic engagement. The solution isn't to abandon capital but to manage its entry point. Successful models like Substack, Patreon, or Bandcamp allow capital to "condense" at specific, isolated nodes (e.g., subscriptions, one-time payments) without permeating and "heating" every social interaction. They preserve the core "cold," participatory medium while enabling monetization at designated boundaries. The NFT boom and bust serves as a stark parallel: the ancient "cold" medium of collecting (valued for story, community, gradual accumulation) was rapidly destroyed by platforms that introduced real-time floor prices, rarity scores, and trading dashboards, transforming collectors into speculators and vaporizing cultural value when prices fell. The core lesson: "Liquidity equals heat." Injecting high liquidity and definitive pricing into a "cold" participatory medium doesn't optimize it; it fundamentally alters and destroys its value-creating mechanism. The future lies not in pricing every social gesture but in finding precise, non-invasive points for capital to condense without overheating the entire ecosystem.

marsbitHá 27m

Why Pricing Social Interactions is Doomed to Fail?

marsbitHá 27m

Jensen Huang's CMU Speech: In the AI Era, Don't Just Watch, Build

Jensen Huang, CEO of NVIDIA and a first-generation immigrant, delivered the commencement address to Carnegie Mellon University's class of 2026. He shared his personal journey from a humble background to founding NVIDIA, emphasizing resilience, learning from failure, and the responsibility that comes with leadership. Huang framed the present moment as the dawn of the AI revolution, a shift he believes is more profound than previous computing waves. He described AI as fundamentally resetting computing—moving from human-written software to machines that understand, reason, and use tools. This will create a new industry for generating intelligence and transform every sector. While acknowledging AI's potential to automate tasks and displace some jobs, Huang distinguished between the *tasks* of a job and its core *purpose*. He argued AI will augment human capability, not replace humans. The real risk, he stated, is not AI itself, but people being left behind by those who effectively use AI. He presented AI as a generational opportunity for massive infrastructure investment—in chip factories, data centers, energy grids, and advanced manufacturing—that could re-industrialize nations like the U.S. and bridge the digital divide by making computing and intelligent tools accessible to all. Huang called for a balanced approach: advancing AI safely and responsibly, establishing prudent policies, ensuring broad access, and encouraging universal participation. He urged the graduates not to fear the future but to engage with optimism and ambition, reminding them of CMU's motto, "My heart is in the work." His core message was clear: this is their moment to actively build and shape the AI-powered future, not merely observe it.

marsbitHá 1h

Jensen Huang's CMU Speech: In the AI Era, Don't Just Watch, Build

marsbitHá 1h

Trading

Spot
Futuros
活动图片