Initial Use Cases & Expansion Plan

Modulr’s adoption strategy is based on three key principles. Firstly, to initially target robotics use cases that have here-and-now applications and revenue potential rather than pie in the sky theoretical applications. Secondly to target a diverse range of commercial, consumer and academic markets. Finally, to lay the groundwork to ensure that our decentralized Operating System is ultimately geared towards expanding beyond pure-play robotics applications to become the default proof-of-utility chain for the entire robotics-enabled economy. Initial use cases will include:

Commercial Robotics Routines Marketplace: Allows developers to monetize commercially valuable robotics routines that they have created by tokenizing them and trading them with businesses seeking effective routines that they don’t need to build from the ground up.

Remote Campus Humanoid Explorers: Stations tele-operated humanoid robots on university grounds so prospective students can tour campuses in real time from anywhere, slashing travel costs, boosting accessibility for millions, and creating a high-margin, recurring revenue stream for Modulr and its academic partners.

Construction & Demolition RaaS Swarms: Delivers and coordinates fleets of modular robots, available on a pay-as-you-go Robotics-as-a-Service (Raas) basis to demolition and construction crews. Allows contractor to scale automation instantly without owning or maintaining heavy equipment.

University Robotics Sharing Network: Empowers under-funded universities to run advanced robots by leasing time on hardware that’s hosted at better-equipped campuses, giving smaller schools affordable access to cutting-edge systems while letting host universities earn rental revenue and Modulr captures network fees.

Tele-Robotics Work Platform: Enables skilled workers to operate drones, warehouse bots, or inspection devices from anywhere by streaming low-latency control through Modulr, letting businesses cut on-site labor and travel costs while every session generates data that trains smarter automation.

Real-World Robotics Gaming & Learning Hub: Lets consumers and students pilot Modulr-connected robots in Rocket-League-style matches, remote scavenger hunts, or landmark-locked lessons, opening a mass-market channel for Modulr.

These target areas are designed to not only tackle immediate short-term use cases but also integrate Modulr into multiple verticals as part of the broader strategy for becoming the base layer for the omnisector modular services industry that will underpin the entire robotics-enabled economy.

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