Meta shuts down Horizon Workrooms: the metaverse “for work” is left without a future
Meta is in a restructuring phase and as part of that process they have decided to end one of the key points of the metaverse
Everything points to the Meta metaverse entering “ghost mode”: when even the part designed for work is shut down, the narrative of “the future of the internet” runs out of fuel. Meta confirmed that Horizon Workrooms is being discontinued as a standalone app and that the shutdown will be effective February 16, 2026, with a stark warning: all data associated with Workrooms will be deleted.
Meta shuts down Horizon Workrooms
Horizon Workrooms was the “serious metaverse,” Meta’s attempt to turn virtual reality into an office with meetings, whiteboards, virtual screens, and avatars that… well, were supposed to replace Zoom. The symbolic thing here is that we’re not talking about a small experiment: it was the productivity showcase that Mark Zuckerberg presented as part of that vision of immersive work that Meta wanted to normalize.
The official notice states that Workrooms will cease operating as a standalone application on February 16, 2026, and that after that date, access will be lost and related data will be deleted.
Meta also pushes people to look at other options (yes, basically they're telling you "try something else"), including alternatives like Microsoft Teams/Zoom and apps available in its ecosystem.
The "metaverse for work" didn't catch on
The underlying problem is that the promise of the corporate metaverse never materialized on a large scale: putting on a headset for a meeting sounds futuristic... until you've been using it for 20 minutes with the battery running low, the headset pressing too hard, and the avatar looking weird. And although Meta frames it as an evolution (that Horizon is now a social platform that "supports" more tools), the concrete fact is that they are shutting down the product that justified the metaverse as a productivity space.
The most revealing thing is the subtext: if the metaverse was the next big "platform change," the logical thing would be to reinforce its use in companies (where there are budgets and clear needs), not abandon the dedicated app format. But what is seen from the outside is something else: a silent, step-by-step withdrawal of those pieces that supported the original discourse.
Meta shifts focus and the metaverse cools down
Closing Workrooms also reads as part of a broader adjustment: Meta has been cutting back and reorganizing efforts around Reality Labs, while the tech sector obsesses over what is generating immediate traction (hello, AI). In other words, the metaverse is ceasing to be “the game-changing priority” and becoming “just another line item” in a portfolio where the urgent competes with the ambitious.
Meta ending Workrooms doesn't mean it's going to abandon VR tomorrow, but it does send a clear signal to the market: the era of selling meetings in virtual worlds as the new standard no longer feels inevitable. If what remained as a “serious” use case is being shut down and, on top of that, having its data erased, it's hard not to think that the metaverse—at least as Meta sold it—is getting closer and closer to becoming a “remember when?” moment.
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