History will record it as one of the most expensive failed experiments in the technology industry. Meta has announced the retirement of Horizon Worlds from VR platforms — cleared from the Quest store by March’s end and fully gone from VR by June 15. Mark Zuckerberg’s metaverse, the project that reshaped his company’s name and direction, has reached its end with nearly $80 billion in losses to show for it.
The seed of this story was planted in 2021 when Zuckerberg made a dramatic wager that the future of human interaction lay in immersive virtual worlds. Facebook became Meta, and the company threw its full weight behind building shared digital spaces where users would gather as avatars. The vision was specific and sweeping: a billion users within ten years, a thriving virtual economy, and a new creative class built around the platform.
The wager did not pay off. Horizon Worlds remained peripheral at best, with user numbers that never exceeded a few hundred thousand monthly participants. Despite updates, new features, and sustained marketing, the platform failed to build the kind of engaged user base that sustains a social product. It became a symbol of technological ambition divorced from actual human desire.
Meanwhile, Reality Labs continued to burn through money at a remarkable rate. Its cumulative losses since 2020 have reached close to $80 billion, a figure that prompted harsh scrutiny from investors and analysts alike. The wave of layoffs that hit the division in early 2025 — cutting more than 1,000 positions — confirmed that the long-running experiment was winding down.
Social media users responded with jokes and incredulity in equal measure. The image of $80 billion spent on a virtual world with almost no inhabitants struck many as absurd. As Meta pivots toward AI, the metaverse chapter closes — expensive, instructive, and deeply humbling for one of the world’s most powerful companies.
