What the metaverse concept is
The term "metaverse" (from Neal Stephenson's 1992 novel Snow Crash) describes an interconnected, persistent virtual world — a digital space in which people work, socialise and play using avatars, separate from but parallel to the physical world. In its most expansive conception, the metaverse is a successor to the internet: an immersive, 3D environment experienced through VR and AR headsets rather than screens.
The Meta bet
In late 2021, Facebook renamed itself Meta and committed to a strategy of building the social metaverse, reportedly spending $10-15 billion per year through its Reality Labs division. Horizon Worlds — Meta's social VR platform — launched to limited uptake. By 2022-2023, disappointing user numbers, criticism of avatar quality, and the distraction of managing TikTok competition on Instagram led Meta to significantly scale back its metaverse ambitions, laying off thousands of employees and refocusing on AI.
The hardware problem
The VR headset market has grown but not at the pace required to make a mass social metaverse viable. The Meta Quest 3 and Apple Vision Pro represent genuinely impressive hardware; the Vision Pro, at $3,499, is a premium developer device rather than a mass consumer product. Adoption curves for computing platforms typically span decades; the smartphone, despite being a transformative technology, took 15+ years to reach close to universal adoption.
What remains
More modest applications of spatial computing and VR have genuine traction: enterprise training simulations (surgical, industrial, military), architectural and design visualisation, virtual events and concerts, and social gaming. These are real markets; the question is whether they justify the "metaverse" framing or whether they are simply extensions of existing VR applications. The longer-term trajectory toward more immersive computing is more likely correct than wrong.