The name Meta was chosen to mean something. Now, after close to $80 billion in losses and minimal user adoption, the project that inspired the name is being shut down. Horizon Worlds will leave VR platforms — off the Quest store by March, fully terminated on June 15. Mark Zuckerberg renamed his company after a vision that is now being quietly retired, leaving the name as a monument to an ambition that did not survive contact with consumer reality.
The rebrand in 2021 was meant to be transformative and permanent. Changing the name of one of the world’s most recognized brands is not a decision made lightly. Zuckerberg made it because he believed the metaverse would be as central to Meta’s identity as social networking had been to Facebook’s. The name would eventually make sense to everyone — once the metaverse arrived and proved itself.
The metaverse never proved itself. Horizon Worlds attracted modest user numbers that remained in the hundreds of thousands monthly, far below any scale that could justify the rebrand’s implicit promise. The platform existed but did not flourish. Its virtual environments were accessible but not magnetic. The company named after the metaverse was running a metaverse that most people had no particular reason to visit.
Reality Labs spent close to $80 billion trying to change that equation. When more than 1,000 of its employees were laid off in early 2025, the attempt was formally concluded. Meta began redirecting investment toward AI, and the metaverse was reduced to a mobile app — a shadow of what the rebrand had promised it would become.
The name Meta remains, carrying with it the history of a vision that was announced loudly and abandoned quietly. Whether the name will eventually stand for something else — AI, wearables, the next platform — depends on what Zuckerberg builds next. For now, it stands primarily as the brand that was chosen to represent a future that never quite arrived.