Meta Horizon Worlds VR platform interface showing virtual avatars and environments
← Back to Metaverse & VR đŸ„œ Metaverse & VR: Platform Updates

Meta's Shocking U-Turn: Why Horizon Worlds VR Shutdown Was Cancelled After User Revolt

📅 March 29, 2026 ⏱ 6 min read ✍ GReverse Team
Chaos at Meta's Menlo Park headquarters. The company that rebranded from Facebook to chase the metaverse dream just announced a complete 180 on its Horizon Worlds strategy. After declaring in February 2026 that it would shut down the VR portion of the platform in June, Meta now says "never mind" — Horizon Worlds will remain available on Quest headsets.

📖 Read more: Meta Shuts Down VR Productivity Service Workrooms February 2026

📖 Read more: Meta Kills Horizon Workrooms: The End of VR Office Dreams

🎯 The Numbers Game Reveals the Truth

It started with a simple Instagram Story question. A Horizon Worlds fan wrote to Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth saying they felt "heartbroken" about the end of the VR experience. That's when Bosworth had second thoughts. "We decided, today actually, that we're going to keep Horizon Worlds active in VR," he announced in one of his signature Q&A sessions.
$73 billion Reality Labs losses since 2021
16% Quest sales drop in 2025
This statement directly contradicts what Meta had written in an official announcement on its community forum. There, it had clearly stated that on June 15, 2026, Horizon Worlds would become accessible only via smartphone and web. Now it seems there's a schizophrenic approach: legacy worlds with Unity engine will remain VR-only, while new ones with Horizon Engine will be mobile-focused.

📖 Read more: Ultralight VR Headset Meta Puffin: Revolution with Pocket Computing

🔄 The Strategy That Changes Every 6 Months

Meta has changed its VR strategy more times than a Call of Duty player switches weapons. In a blog post by Samantha Ryan, VP of Content at Reality Labs, the company attempts to explain its "Renewed Focus in 2026" — which in practice means moving away from VR gaming toward supporting third-party developers. According to data revealed by Ryan, 86% of the time users spend with Quest headsets involves third-party applications. That's not a bad statistic — but it reveals that its own games aren't drawing crowds. Meta claims it invested nearly $150 million in developer programs in 2025, but the numbers don't show it.

The Games That "Made the Difference"

Ryan mentions specific titles that made millions on the platform: UG, Hard Bullet, and The Thrill of the Fight 2. Notably, these are indie productions — not AAA blockbusters as you'd expect from a company that's spent $73 billion on VR.

"While we're proud of the work of Oculus Studios over the years, between first-party and third-party apps, 86% of the time people spend in VR headsets is on third-party applications"

— Samantha Ryan, VP of Content, Meta Reality Labs

📖 Read more: Payday VR & Compass: Hands-On with 5 New Quest Titles

📖 Read more: VR Art: Creating Works and 3D Worlds

đŸ“± The Mobile Transition That's Not So Successful

The numbers for mobile Horizon Worlds are... interesting. According to Appfigures, the app has accumulated a total of 45 million downloads on iOS and Android. Sounds impressive, until you see that total consumer spending is just $1.1 million. To put this in perspective: Meta spends this amount on Reality Labs in about 2 hours. The 53% year-over-year increase in downloads looks positive on paper. But when the baseline is so low, even a relatively small improvement creates impressive percentages. 2026 so far has seen 1.5 million downloads — good numbers for an indie developer, not so much for a platform costing billions.

📖 Read more: New Ultra-Light Headset with Compute Puck: Meta's Shift from Traditional VR

⚡ The Hardware Problem Nobody Talks About

A critical element often overlooked is the state of the VR hardware market. According to IDC, Quest headset sales dropped 16% in 2025 compared to 2024. Meanwhile, Apple has reduced Vision Pro production due to low demand — and we're talking about a $3,500 product targeting a premium audience.
Meta continues to claim it's "far ahead of all competitors" in Quest sales — but when the entire industry is shrinking, being first doesn't mean much. It's like winning a race where all participants have their legs tied together.
The problem isn't just the technology — it's the user experience. VR headsets remain heavy, uncomfortable for extended use, and the content library is limited. Meta is trying to solve these issues with the new Navigator UI that will replace Horizon Feed, but these are band-aid solutions to structural problems.

What the New Navigator Means

The new Navigator interface will become the default on Quest headsets, replacing Horizon Feed. In practice, this means users will see a grid of their installed applications instead of social content. A move that shows Meta admits: social VR didn't work as imagined.

📖 Read more: Quest VR Releases March 2026: Top New Games

📖 Read more: Meta Pivots Strategy: Puffin Headset 2026 Instead of Quest 4

🏱 The Layoffs That Tell the Truth

In January 2026, Meta proceeded with layoffs of more than 1,500 employees at Reality Labs. It also closed many game studios it had acquired, canceled the Batman: Arkham Shadow sequel, and stopped Horizon Workrooms for business use. These moves speak louder than any blog post. Rumors suggest even more cuts are coming — possibly affecting 20% of the company. Meta may say it "remains bullish on VR," but its actions show a different picture.

Gaming Studios

Closure of multiple studios and cancellation of Batman sequel

Enterprise VR

End of Horizon Workrooms for businesses

đŸ€” What This All Means for the Future

Meta's strategy change reveals something significant: VR, at least in its current form, isn't ready for prime time. The company that bet more than anyone on the new technology is now turning to AI and smart glasses — where it sees real ROI. Horizon Worlds will remain on Quest headsets, but only in legacy mode. New content will be created primarily for mobile, with VR taking a secondary role. It's a strategy that masks Meta's retreat from the metaverse vision — but at least it's more realistic. The question that remains is: how long will it take for Meta to admit that VR, in its current form, was an expensive experiment that didn't pan out? The coming months will show whether this "course correction" is enough — or if more drastic changes are needed in Meta's Reality Labs strategy.
Meta Horizon Worlds VR Quest metaverse Reality Labs platform shutdown user backlash Meta strategy virtual reality gaming

Sources: