Facebook on Thursday announced that it is opening up Horizon World, its virtual reality world of avatars, to anyone 18 and older in the U.S. and Canada.
Courtesy of Meta
Facebook on Thursday announced that it is opening up Horizon Worlds, its virtual reality world of avatars, to anyone 18 and older in the U.S. and Canada.
Horizon Worlds launched in beta last year to a select few Oculus VR users for who had to have invites in order to join the virtual world. With the announcement on Thursday, users will no longer need invites to go into the Horizon Worlds beta.
The broader launch of Horizon Worlds is an important step for Facebook, which officially changed its name to Meta in October. The company adopted the new moniker, based on the sci-fi term “metaverse,” to describe its vision for working and playing in a virtual world.
In Horizon Worlds, users of Facebook’s Oculus virtual reality headsets can create a legless avatar to wander around in the animated virtual world. There, they can play games and interact with other users’ avatars.
Facebook acquired Oculus for $2 billion in 2014, and has since struggled to get market traction beyond a niche audience. But Facebook has made building technologies, products and services for the metaverse its central focus moving forward.
In July, the company announced the formation of a team that would work on the metaverse. Two months later, the company said it would elevate Andrew “Boz” Bosworth, who is currently the head of the company’s hardware division, to the role of chief technology officer in 2022. And in its third-quarter earnings results in October, the company announced it will break out the Reality Labs hardware division into its own reporting segment starting in the fourth quarter.
In October, the company said that it will spend about $10 billion over the next year developing the technologies required for building the metaverse.
“Our hope is that within the next decade, the metaverse will reach a billion people, host hundreds of billions of dollars of digital commerce, and support jobs for millions of creators and developers,” Zuckerberg wrote in October.