Hopium for your robotic bags after I spent some time actually reading through the material is here.
This thing didn’t really pop in 2025 cuz it’s still a build year.
Macro was ugly for anything capital-intensive. Rates stayed high, risk appetite stayed selective, and money kept flowing to software-first stories with faster feedback loops.
Robotics, by nature, is a slow burn. That doesn’t play well in a market obsessed with instant narratives.
On the TradFi side, robot adoption is still surprisingly low in the US, IPO exits have been thin, and even big incumbents like Fanuc or Rockwell are reporting steady growth, not breakout numbers.
Humanoids also aren’t ready to quietly take care of your parents or do household chores at scale. Perception, safety, unstructured environments, and regulation are real blockers.
In crypto, most robotics tokens in 2025 were trying to front-run adoption that wasn’t ready. Even when you saw pumps, they faded fast because there wasn’t sustained demand to absorb supply.
→ The whole sector stayed sub-$700M combined, which tells you institutions were still on the sidelines.
Most capital this year flowed into things that felt defensive or immediately monetizable like stablecoins, yield, prediction markets, privacy…
Robotics sits one layer below that, still asking the market to believe before revenues really show up.
So why am I still spending time on this?
Not because the thesis is wrong, but because price action stays capped until demand catches up. I think 2026 is when the shape actually changes.
1/ By 2026, humanoid production ramps for real
– Tesla, BYD, Agility, Unitree all have concrete production targets for 2026
– Costs are dropping way faster than expected, down ~40% instead of the usual slow curve
– The narrative shifts from “does robotics work?” to how we deploy and coordinate millions of them
2/ Crypto fits naturally
Robots at scale need machine-native economics. TradFi rails don’t handle that well, blockchains do.
By 2026, #DePIN is no longer theoretical, with dozens of networks already live. Robots become both producers and consumers inside onchain economies.
3/ Capital is coming back
Robotics VC funding already rebounded in 2024–2025. Seed and Series A stayed alive, and there’s a backlog of private robotics companies that could IPO once conditions improve.
4/ Policy flips too
Governments are lining up budgets and strategies around automation and robotics.
The US starts treating robotics as strategic. China, Korea, and the EU already fund it heavily.
When policy aligns with labor shortages and re-industrialization, adoption accelerates in ways markets tend to underestimate.
If you, like me, expected robotics to rip faces this year, it didn’t. But 2026 might be the lighter window.
Keep watching who’s quietly building through the bear, who survives the boring phase, and where you add to your bag.
A lot of this won’t stay cheap.
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Hopium for your robotic bags after I spent some time actually reading through the material is here.
This thing didn’t really pop in 2025 cuz it’s still a build year.
Macro was ugly for anything capital-intensive. Rates stayed high, risk appetite stayed selective, and money kept flowing to software-first stories with faster feedback loops.
Robotics, by nature, is a slow burn. That doesn’t play well in a market obsessed with instant narratives.
On the TradFi side, robot adoption is still surprisingly low in the US, IPO exits have been thin, and even big incumbents like Fanuc or Rockwell are reporting steady growth, not breakout numbers.
Humanoids also aren’t ready to quietly take care of your parents or do household chores at scale. Perception, safety, unstructured environments, and regulation are real blockers.
In crypto, most robotics tokens in 2025 were trying to front-run adoption that wasn’t ready. Even when you saw pumps, they faded fast because there wasn’t sustained demand to absorb supply.
→ The whole sector stayed sub-$700M combined, which tells you institutions were still on the sidelines.
Most capital this year flowed into things that felt defensive or immediately monetizable like stablecoins, yield, prediction markets, privacy…
Robotics sits one layer below that, still asking the market to believe before revenues really show up.
So why am I still spending time on this?
Not because the thesis is wrong, but because price action stays capped until demand catches up. I think 2026 is when the shape actually changes.
1/ By 2026, humanoid production ramps for real
– Tesla, BYD, Agility, Unitree all have concrete production targets for 2026
– Costs are dropping way faster than expected, down ~40% instead of the usual slow curve
– The narrative shifts from “does robotics work?” to how we deploy and coordinate millions of them
2/ Crypto fits naturally
Robots at scale need machine-native economics. TradFi rails don’t handle that well, blockchains do.
By 2026, #DePIN is no longer theoretical, with dozens of networks already live. Robots become both producers and consumers inside onchain economies.
3/ Capital is coming back
Robotics VC funding already rebounded in 2024–2025. Seed and Series A stayed alive, and there’s a backlog of private robotics companies that could IPO once conditions improve.
4/ Policy flips too
Governments are lining up budgets and strategies around automation and robotics.
The US starts treating robotics as strategic. China, Korea, and the EU already fund it heavily.
When policy aligns with labor shortages and re-industrialization, adoption accelerates in ways markets tend to underestimate.
If you, like me, expected robotics to rip faces this year, it didn’t. But 2026 might be the lighter window.
Keep watching who’s quietly building through the bear, who survives the boring phase, and where you add to your bag.
A lot of this won’t stay cheap.