EX1A-13 TST WTRS 31 tm2617498d1_ex13.htm EXHIBIT 13

Exhibit 13

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Updates on Campaign Website

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Campaign Website (Video Scripts): 

 

VIDEO - MAIN 

 

00:00:00:00 - 00:00:07:23 

Unknown 

The way that I got into this was my dad got Parkinson's. And so I came back to Kansas and given a little more research,

 

00:00:08:01 - 00:00:09:11

Unknown

came from farm chemicals.

 

00:00:09:11 - 00:00:11:06

Unknown

It was very likely.

 

00:00:11:08 - 00:00:13:00

Unknown

so that began the quest to.

 

00:00:13:00 - 00:00:14:15

Unknown

why don't we grow organically

 

00:00:14:17 - 00:00:18:09

Unknown

then became the quest of let's get chemicals out of agriculture

 

 

 

 

00:00:18:09 - 00:00:19:23

Unknown

everywhere, on every front.

 

00:00:20:00 - 00:00:21:10 

Unknown 

Our mission at green tilts

 

00:00:21:11 - 00:00:28:02 

Unknown 

pretty straight ahead and to get chemicals out of food and agriculture. So it starts with the field and it goes all the way to grocery stores eventually.

 

00:00:28:02 - 00:00:30:05 

Unknown 

There are billions of acres

 

00:00:30:05 - 00:00:31:07 

Unknown 

around the

 

00:00:31:09 - 00:00:34:06 

Unknown 

And almost all of those chemicals going on

 

00:00:34:09 - 00:00:36:05 

Unknown 

the chemical load is massive

 

Video Scripts - 2

 

 

00:00:36:06 - 00:00:37:09

Unknown

it suppresses human

 

00:00:37:15 - 00:00:40:06

Unknown

health and it suppresses soil health.

 

00:00:40:06 - 00:00:44:10

Unknown

And the idea that we're going to micro spray and micro dose is also absurd.

 

00:00:44:15 - 00:00:46:06

Unknown

everything starts with plants.

 

00:00:46:08 - 00:00:48:16

Unknown

How you meet those animals?

 

00:00:48:18 - 00:00:50:02

Unknown

if we take care of the plants

 

Video Scripts - 3

 

 

00:00:50:04 - 00:00:52:18

Unknown

then we're taking care of business.

 

00:00:52:21 - 00:00:56:23

Unknown

And that is all based on the concept of regenerative agriculture.

 

00:00:57:01 - 00:00:58:00

Unknown

don't till the

 

00:00:58:02 - 00:01:01:21

Unknown

you vary what you're growing in long crop rotations use cover crops

 

00:01:02:00 - 00:01:06:02

Unknown

And our robots are designed to make that system flourish

 

00:01:06:05 - 00:01:09:00

Unknown

and to make it scale faster

 

00:01:09:01 - 00:01:10:18

Unknown

and to also eliminate

 

Video Scripts - 4

 

 

00:01:10:22 - 00:01:13:01

Unknown

its current Achilles heel, which is herbicides.

 

00:01:13:03 - 00:01:18:05

Unknown 

In terms of achievements with Greenfield, I think we're the best in the world of what we do. And I don't think anyone's particularly close.

 

00:01:18:06 - 00:01:20:22

Unknown

No one else can run a ton of robots in the fields

 

00:01:20:23 - 00:01:22:14

Unknown

We've been doing it for five

 

00:01:22:16 - 00:01:24:20

Unknown

No one else has gone through four different Com systems

 

00:01:25:00 - 00:01:26:18

Unknown

We're doing it in 16 states,

 

00:01:26:21 - 00:01:28:20

Unknown

And we're on the big fields. We're not in

 

Video Scripts - 5

 

 

00:01:28:21 - 00:01:33:20

Unknown

little tiny fields running around with make believe acres. We're doing massive amounts of acres

 

00:01:34:00 - 00:01:36:18

Unknown

in large fields, and we're eliminating real chemicals,

 

00:01:36:18 - 00:01:38:18

Unknown

our impact is beyond anybody's.

 

00:01:38:20 - 00:01:39:08

Unknown

We have

 

00:01:39:08 - 00:01:42:02

Unknown

82 robots in the field in 2026.

 

00:01:42:02 - 00:01:42:23

Unknown

We don't run around

 

Video Scripts - 6

 

 

00:01:43:02 - 00:01:48:08

Unknown

talking to everybody how great everything is. Before they built it, we built it and then we talk about

 

00:01:48:10 - 00:01:50:02

Unknown

I think we've built something amazing.

 

00:01:50:02 - 00:01:53:22

Unknown

And I think I've got a team here that runs through walls on a regular basis,

 

00:01:53:23 - 00:02:01:23

Unknown

Greenfield is not just robots running on ag fields. Greenfield is a system change over time to our entire food system.

 

00:02:01:23 - 00:02:08:01

Unknown

So it starts with solving the root fundamental problem in the field, but it ends somewhere completely different

 

00:02:08:06 - 00:02:13:16

Unknown

We are here to change the entire farming and food system.

 

Video Scripts - 7

 

 

VIDEO - DAHL

 

00:00:00:07 - 00:00:27:15

Unknown

It takes vision to see the future. Wayne Gretzky, the greatest hockey player ever. It was described that good hockey players go to where the puck is. Wayne Gretzky went to where the puck was going to be. That was a description of him. I think for anyone looking at Greenfield, there needs to be a conviction that this is where things are moving, and I have the privilege of being a part of something that is moving into direction that I like.

 

00:00:27:16 - 00:00:40:27

Unknown

That's my simple advice to somebody, whether it's crowdfunding or somebody looking at a major investment, being part of something that is a chance to be transformational for agriculture.

 

VIDEO – GRANDFARM

 

00:00:00:00 - 00:00:04:10

Unknown

Good morning. My name is John, man. I'm the startup investor program manager here at grandfather.

 

00:00:04:14 - 00:00:23:05

Unknown

Grandfather is a nonprofit based in Fargo, North Dakota, and our goal is to solve challenges in agriculture with applied technology through an ecosystem approach. So we work with startups, corporations, university researchers, investors, government, all with the goal of bringing solutions to market that will solve the largest problems for growers.

 

Video Scripts - 8

 

 

00:00:23:10 - 00:00:30:02

Unknown

Honestly, I thought it was it was absolutely wild. I mean, I think it's a concept that's becoming a little bit more popular, but to see

 

00:00:30:02 - 00:00:37:11

Unknown

the really strong branding with the yellow robots moving through the field autonomously and solving a major challenge challenge that faces growers in this region.

 

00:00:37:11 - 00:00:53:24

Unknown

So herbicide resistant weeds is one of the major, major challenges that conventional growers are facing here. And so to have a tool that can solve problems for these conventional growers, but also bring about the ability to try new practices and really change the way that we farm.

 

00:00:53:27 - 00:01:11:04

Unknown

We're incredibly excited for the Greenfield trial, I think for two reasons. Number one, autonomy. So, yeah, you know, as we look at challenges with labor force, this is a real potential solution to to solve some of those issues. So that's on one side we get really excited for the autonomy. And and from my perspective, the data collection,

 

00:01:11:04 - 00:01:20:08

Unknown

the ability to be able to drive through the rows, you've got all this fantastic capability to collect a ton of imagery, attach other sensors to the robot.

 

00:01:20:08 - 00:01:23:00

Unknown

And so I think the the autonomy piece is incredibly exciting,

 

Video Scripts - 9

 

 

00:01:23:02 - 00:01:38:17

Unknown

also just the change in practices that this technology will be able to bring. You know, cover cropping isn't super common in the Red River Valley has, as we discussed, short timing. It can make it a little bit more challenging. And so as we look at these new practices, new ways to grow, I think that's really exciting.

 

00:01:38:18 - 00:01:55:17

Unknown

That combination of being able to bring practices that are going to reduce erosion, increase water infiltration, hopefully increase yields or increase profitability of the farmer. Ultimately, you know, I think that could be a real game changer for the Red River Valley and for North Dakota as a whole.

 

00:01:55:19 - 00:01:59:13

Unknown

Yeah, yeah. Listen, you guys do some pretty innovative stuff up here.

 

00:01:59:13 - 00:02:17:29

Unknown

So I think there's a lot. We'll gather from this as well, you know, and every settings a little bit different now I think sometimes it's overstated how different farms are. I think there's more similarities and differences regardless of where you are geographically. Clay is clay and sandy sand. But there are differences when you start combining all the variables.

 

00:02:17:29 - 00:02:20:12

Unknown

And so I'm excited about that.

 

Video Scripts - 10

 

 

00:02:20:15 - 00:02:22:06

Unknown

it's a great opportunity for us.

 

00:02:22:06 - 00:02:39:00

Unknown 

And I'm going to elaborate on this a little bit. I think, you know, with Howard Doll's involvement. So it is how we came to know about what was going on here. I had no idea. And I met Howard and we've come up here. And I was kind of shocked. I was here the day you guys celebrated your opening, right?

 

00:02:39:01 - 00:03:15:01

Unknown

I had no concept. And and I think seeing this kind of support and the history in this area, I don't think people understand how much innovation in AG and even construction, if you include bobcat in the discussion, has actually originated here in Fargo, right? Like, I think everyone thinks of the movie and it's a cold place, but actually a tremendous amount of innovation, electronics, a lot of the technology, I believe that we see that already exists in AG, which is a tremendous amount of technology that people underestimate.

 

00:03:15:03 - 00:03:36:15

Unknown

A lot of it came from here, right? Yeah. I mean, you've got bobcat, you've got type machinery. You know, the skid steer, I believe, was invented by some turkey farmers in Minnesota. And so, you know, there's there's a rich history of innovation here, great adoption of technology. But this is I mean, this is wildly different. We're used to big machinery, especially as you get further west.

 

Video Scripts - 11

 

 

00:03:36:16 - 00:04:00:05

Unknown

You've got really, really large machinery. So shifting to something that is a lot smaller and swarm farming is kind of a radical change to how we farm. But, you know, I think momentum is being built behind this type of model. And so this is a great place, great opportunity to prove that it works. And hopefully these growers in the region are going to be the first ones to really uptake it and validate it.

 

00:04:00:10 - 00:04:10:09

Unknown

the fact that you guys want to be here for multiple years and you want to see the impact that it's going to have, I think that's incredibly exciting because this this is tough ground to work with, this, this specific field that we're on.

 

00:04:10:09 - 00:04:20:17

Unknown

And so getting to track those changes over time, collect a ton of data. You know, it'll be strong proof that growers can adopt these practices and and have a tool that's going to make it easier.

 

00:04:20:24 - 00:04:35:21

Unknown

this season is going to be incredibly exciting. I've been around Grand Farms since 2020 and working for the last about two and a half years, and every season has been, you know, a step forward, learning about lots of new challenges, deploying new technologies ourselves, getting new startups.

 

00:04:35:21 - 00:04:59:13

Unknown

And so, you know, we've had a hand, we've got a couple that are coming back for their third year testing on the farm. So that's really exciting. It's been a lot of biologicals and bio stimulants, which you know, our a hot topic with high fertilizer prices. But this year was really the year of autonomy. You know, last year we had some cool tillage demonstrations, but nothing that was really end to end autonomy or, you know, really significant operations on the farm.

 

Video Scripts - 12

 

 

00:04:59:13 - 00:05:25:19

Unknown

And so, you know, as we get Greenfield out here and some others, I think it's really exciting to see the impact that they're going to have, what their plots actually look like towards the end of the season, and really have it represented through the entire growing season, as opposed to some someone off demos. So as we get into the season, into our events, it's going to be really exciting to watch the crop come up, see the management differences, because there's a lot of different ways that we manage on the farm.

 

00:05:25:25 - 00:05:28:04

Unknown

So it's going to be a really, really unique season.

 

00:05:28:04 - 00:05:56:10

Unknown

Grant farm is an open and neutral platform. So, you know, we'll we'll work with any, any technology, any company that wants to come to North Dakota and bring benefits to farmers. Ultimately, I'm very supportive of this mission personally. You know, I have Parkinson's in my family, so it's something that I'm thinking about all the time. And so for for the farmers, you know, for the consumers that want food products that don't have chemicals used, I think this is a really big deal regardless.

 

00:05:56:11 - 00:06:21:12

Unknown

I mean, the chemicals that we have that we do have, you know, not not all of them have efficacy anymore. They're not as effective. It's a tool that's becoming less useful for our farmers. So any alternative that can be developed, that can do as good of a job or get close to their that's what we're looking for. But ultimately, I think it's something that we haven't had represented at Grant farm for the last 3 or 4 years.

 

Video Scripts - 13

 

 

00:06:21:13 - 00:06:32:06

Unknown

And so I think it's really exciting to have these diverse perspectives that might not be quite as mainstream or haven't been quite as mainstream. And to prove it out that it works here, I think, is incredibly

 

00:06:32:09 - 00:06:43:14

Unknown

In our case, over time. Now the idea is you keep the plot and we can not only see what happened on a year over year, but we could see soil health changes. We could see what comes from that maybe reduction fertilizer, a few years in that kind of stuff.

 

00:06:43:18 - 00:06:51:09

Unknown

So with Greenfield, I see so much potential. You know, we have a lot of companies that will come and do one off trials, and that's fantastic.

 

00:06:51:10 - 00:07:13:08

Unknown

We want to see that the products work. We want to show farmers that there's options out here with Greenfield. I think we almost get everything that we want. You know, innovative practices, innovative technology in a local presence. I think that as I've worked with startups over the years here, you can pretty quickly tell who's really in it. They care about the farmers, they care about the region.

 

00:07:13:08 - 00:07:35:15

Unknown

They care about the community. And so Greenfield has started working on manufacturing in Fargo, building some units. And so the the way we look at that long term is if you can bring new practices, increase profitability, sustainability for growers and also create jobs in the region. Yeah. You know, that's what that's the perfect case for Grant farm. That's exactly what we're looking for.

 

Video Scripts - 14

 

 

Ad:

 

 

 

MESSAGE
 

Most corn and soybean fields in the U.S. are weed controlled with toxic chemical sprays. Those chemicals drift. They get into soil, water, and food. It doesn’t have to be that way.

 

Greenfield Robotics makes autonomous robots that cut weeds with centimeter accuracy — no herbicides needed.

 

You can back them before the round opens. Reserve now for a loyalty bonus when you invest.

 

Greenfield Robotics is Testing The Waters under tier 2 of Regulation A. No money or other consideration is being solicited, and if sent in response will not be accepted. No offer to buy the securities can be accepted and no part of the purchase price can be received until the offering statement filed by the company with the SEC has been qualified by the SEC. Any such offer may be withdrawn or revoked, without obligation or commitment of any kind, at any time before notice of acceptance given after the date of qualification. An indication of interest involves no obligation or commitment of any kind. “Reserving” shares is simply an indication of interest. There is no binding commitment for investors that reserve shares in this manner to ultimately invest and purchase the shares reserved of the company, or to purchase any shares of the company whatsoever.

 

 

 

 

Greenfield Robotics builds autonomous robots that can eliminate the need for herbicides from many American farms. Six years in the field. Sixteen states. Manufacturing partnership with Amity Technology. Join the movement to reduce chemical dependence through scalable farm automation.

Reserve your spot.

 

Greenfield Robotics is Testing The Waters under tier 2 of Regulation A. No money or other consideration is being solicited, and if sent in response will not be accepted. No offer to buy the securities can be accepted and no part of the purchase price can be received until the offering statement filed by the company with the SEC has been qualified by the SEC. Any such offer may be withdrawn or revoked, without obligation or commitment of any kind, at any time before notice of acceptance given after the date of qualification. An indication of interest involves no obligation or commitment of any kind. “Reserving” shares is simply an indication of interest. There is no binding commitment for investors that reserve shares in this manner to ultimately invest and purchase the shares reserved of the company, or to purchase any shares of the company whatsoever.

 

HEADLINE: The End of Herbicides is Autonomous

 

 

 

MESSAGE

 

Clint Brauer is a third-generation farmer from Kansas. He grew up watching his father work the fields the way every Midwestern farmer does: spraying herbicides on thousands of acres to keep weeds from killing the crop.

 

His father developed Parkinson's.

 

Clint isn't alone in that. Talk to farming families in Kansas, Iowa, or Nebraska, and you'll probably hear a version of the same story. Parkinson's rates across the Midwest have been climbing for years. The chemical companies say it's not them. The lawsuits say otherwise.

 

With $187.5 million already paid in early settlements and thousands more cases pending, herbicide makers are facing the consequences of suppressing what they knew about Paraquat and Parkinson's disease for years.

 

Clint didn't file a lawsuit. He built a robot.

 

The robot cuts weeds with centimeter accuracy, guided by drone mapping, without a drop of herbicide. It works 24 hours a day. It damages less than 1% of crops -- compared to the 4.5%

 

 

 

 

 

MESSAGE
 
Greenfield Robotics has been running robots on farms for six years. We've signed over $1M in contracts for 2026 deliveries. Rodale Institute, the organization that defined "organic farming," is already using the technology. The investment round opens soon. Reserve before we launch. You'll get a loyalty bonus when you invest. Greenfield Robotics is Testing The Waters under tier 2 of Regulation A. No money or other consideration is being solicited, and if sent in response will not be accepted. No offer to buy the securities can be accepted and no part of the purchase price can be received until the offering statement filed by the company with the SEC has been qualified by the SEC. Any such offer may be withdrawn or revoked, without obligation or commitment of any kind, at any time before notice of acceptance given after the date of qualification. An indication of interest involves no obligation or commitment of any kind. “Reserving” shares is simply an indication of interest. There is no binding commitment for investors that reserve shares in this manner to ultimately invest and purchase the shares reserved of the company, or to purchase any shares of the company whatsoever.

 

 

 

 

 

MESSAGE
 

The first wave often gets the biggest advantages. Reserve your interest in Greenfield Robotics today and unlock special supporter benefits available before the offering opens. Learn why farmers across multiple states are already putting Greenfield robots to work.

 

Greenfield Robotics is Testing The Waters under tier 2 of Regulation A. No money or other consideration is being solicited, and if sent in response will not be accepted. No offer to buy the securities can be accepted and no part of the purchase price can be received until the offering statement filed by the company with the SEC has been qualified by the SEC. Any such offer may be withdrawn or revoked, without obligation or commitment of any kind, at any time before notice of acceptance given after the date of qualification. An indication of interest involves no obligation or commitment of any kind. “Reserving” shares is simply an indication of interest. There is no binding commitment for investors that reserve shares in this manner to ultimately invest and purchase the shares reserved of the company, or to purchase any shares of the company whatsoever.

 

 

 

MESSAGE
 

The man behind modern farm equipment is betting that autonomous robots will replace chemicals. With Howard Dahl’s investment and partnership, Greenfield Robotics just went from building robots in a Kansas barn to manufacturing with the most decorated family in agricultural machinery history.

 

Reserve before we launch to get a special loyalty bonus when you invest.

 

Greenfield Robotics is Testing The Waters under tier 2 of Regulation A. No money or other consideration is being solicited, and if sent in response will not be accepted. No offer to buy the securities can be accepted and no part of the purchase price can be received until the offering statement filed by the company with the SEC has been qualified by the SEC. Any such offer may be withdrawn or revoked, without obligation or commitment of any kind, at any time before notice of acceptance given after the date of qualification. An indication of interest involves no obligation or commitment of any kind. “Reserving” shares is simply an indication of interest. There is no binding commitment for investors that reserve shares in this manner to ultimately invest and purchase the shares reserved of the company, or to purchase any shares of the company whatsoever.

 

 

 

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Greenfield Robotics: TTW Press Release

 

PRESS RELEASE

 

Word Count: 400-500 POV: 3rd Person Tone: Business Formal

 

Greenfield Robotics Opens Reservations for Reg A+ Raise; Early Backers Receive 10% Bonus Shares

 

Subhead: One sentence that provides further info about the news, to hook the reader.
Kansas-founded autonomous farm robotics company is sold out for the 2026 season, has been running in fields for six years, manufactures with the family behind the skid steer and the air drill, and counts Chipotle, Rodale Institute, and more than 2,600 individual investors among its backers.

 

Lenexa, Kansas – May 26, 2026Greenfield Robotics has opened reservations for its upcoming Regulation A+ offering on StartEngine. Investors who reserve shares during the Test the Waters period will receive a 10% bonus share allocation when the offering goes live, with stackable bonuses available up to 20%.

 

The company exists to get chemical herbicides off American farms. Its BOTONY™ field robots replace glyphosate, paraquat, and the other herbicides that have dominated row-crop production for four decades.

 

The reservation window opens after a previously oversubscribed Reg CF round earlier this year, six years of in-field operation, more than $1 million in cumulative revenue, and a new manufacturing partnership that catapults technology development for large-scale commercial deployments.

 

 

 

The mission: clean food, healthy farmers, living soil

 

Most farmers do not want to spray. They rely on glyphosate because it is the cheapest, most predictable way to kill weeds at scale. That math has poisoned the people doing the work and the ground they depend on; more than 6,000 active lawsuits are piling up against paraquat manufacturers. Settlements have already crossed $187.5 million. The global herbicide market is worth roughly $39.5 billion annually and is projected to continue growing.

 

Greenfield gives farmers another option. The updated version of BOTONY™ robots uses computer vision and GPS to perform mechanical weeding, planting, mulching, cover crop seeding, and under-canopy feeding. One platform, six operations, zero chemicals.

 

Founder Clint Brauer puts it plainly: "Our mission at Greenfield is pretty straight ahead, and it's to get chemicals out of food and agriculture. It starts at the field, and it goes all the way to grocery stores eventually."

 

Built by a farmer who lost his father

 

Brauer is a third-generation Kansas farmer. He started Greenfield in 2018 after his father, Tony, developed Parkinson's, a disease repeatedly linked in peer-reviewed studies to long-term exposure to the herbicides every American farmer was told they had to spray.

 

The flagship robot is named BOTONY™. Look at the letters: T-O-N-Y. That is for Tony Brauer.

 

A manufacturing partner the industry knows by reputation

 

Howard Dahl runs Amity Technology out of Fargo, North Dakota. His family invented the skid steer. They built the air drill that plants close to a billion acres worldwide. They scaled the large tractors that run the Northern Plains.

 

Today Amity produces Greenfield's robots in a dedicated facility backed by a $500,000 North Dakota state grant. Dahl is both a manufacturing partner and a personal investor.

 

No competing weeding robotics company on the market has this kind of partnership. Other startups are running pilots and demos. Greenfield is shipping production hardware built by the people who built mechanized American farming.

 

Commercial traction

 

BOTONY™ is deployed on working farms in 16 states. The 2026 season sold out. Reservations for 2027 are open. The company has booked more than $1 million in signed 2026 delivery contracts.

 

Sweet corn grown with BOTONY™ robots reached Whole Foods store shelves last season. Rodale Institute, the organization that defined modern organic standards worldwide, purchased a robot for the 2026 season. Chipotle invested through its Cultivate Next venture fund. Mid Kansas Cooperative, a regional co-op with 11,000 member farmers, invested and onboarded BOTONY™ as a fleet service across its operations. The Kansas Department of Commerce backed the company.

 

 

 

KingsCrowd Capital, the venture fund affiliated with equity crowdfunding research and ratings firm KingsCrowd, also invested in Greenfield. KingsCrowd's analyst team publishes ratings and research reports on hundreds of online private offerings each year.

 

More than 2,600 individual investors have already bought in across two prior crowdfunding rounds. The most recent round closed oversubscribed.

 

The USDA launched the National Proving Grounds Network for AgTech last year. For robotics validation, the agency picked one site: Grand Farm in North Dakota. Greenfield's robots are running there this season.

 

A national conversation moving in the same direction

 

U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. recently delivered the keynote at the inaugural American Regeneration Conference in Bandera, Texas, where he said the country should incentivize transitions to regenerative and less chemically intensive farming. The two-day event, sponsored by Sovereignty Ranch, regenerative agriculture publisher Acres U.S.A., and American Regeneration, drew about 200 farmers, ranchers, and health and policy advocates. Brauer was among the speakers.

 

The ag robotics market is projected to grow from $14.74 billion in 2024 to $48.06 billion by 2030.

 

How to reserve

 

Reservations are open now at the company's StartEngine page. The Test the Waters period grants 5% bonus shares to any investor who reserves before the live raise. A loyalty bonus for prior investors, reservation holders, customers, and brand ambassadors adds another 10%. StartEngine Venture Club members receive an additional 10%. Stackable bonuses are capped at 20%.

 

Disclaimer: Greenfield Robotics is Testing the Waters under Tier 2 of Regulation A+. No money or other consideration is being solicited, and if sent in response will not be accepted. No offer to buy the securities can be accepted, and no part of the purchase price can be received until the offering statement filed by the company with the SEC has been qualified by the SEC. Any such offer may be withdrawn or revoked, without obligation or commitment of any kind, at any time before notice of acceptance is given after the date of qualification. An indication of interest involves no obligation or commitment of any kind. Reserving shares is simply an indication of interest. There is no binding commitment for investors that reserve shares in this manner to ultimately invest and purchase the shares reserved of the company, or to purchase any shares of the company whatsoever.

 

 

 

Contact

Nakita DiGuardi

Head of Marketing

Greenfield Robotics

invest@greenfieldrobotics.com

310-469-8921

Lenexa, Kansas