You've probably seen the headlines. Zuckerberg is finally pulling out of the Metaverse. After nearly $70 billion poured into Reality Labs, thousands of layoffs, and entire VR products being shut down, the "new internet" suddenly looks more like a very expensive experiment. Horizon Workrooms is gone. Horizon Worlds is scaling back. Reported active users never came close to Meta's targets. Reality Labs lost over $17 billion in a single year while bringing in a fraction of that. Investors watched the stock plummet as Zuckerberg, retaining majority voting power, kept doubling down. The biggest problem wasn't just money. It was adoption. VR headset shipments dwindled even though Meta owned most of the market. They were dominating a tiny, shrinking island. Meanwhile, platforms like Fortnite, Roblox, and VRChat quietly built social worlds that people were actually using. Now Meta is pivoting. Fewer bulky headsets, more AI wearables. Ray-Ban smart glasses with built-in cameras and assistants. Over a million sold, with bigger goals ahead. It's a much better form factor, but the ambition remains the same: to own the next platform. So, has Zuckerberg learned from the Metaverse collapse, or is it just the same obsession with a fresh coat of paint? Chapters: 00:00 - Collapse 00:27 - Giving Up 02:21 - Zuck's New Internet 09:42 - Same Obsession, New Bet Information Sources: https://pastebin.com/4SUqbDM4 If you liked the content, remember to subscribe and like the video. You can find our videos in English at Logically Answered, German at Einfach Erklärt, or Hindi at Logikal. We don't hire a company to translate our videos; we translate and customize them ourselves according to the language, so you have direct contact with us.