Facebook owner Meta to take nearly half of sales made by its metaverse creators as fees

Facebook parent Meta Platforms has said it will start testing tools for creators to sell digital assets and in turn make money on Horizon Worlds. PHOTO: REUTERS

BENGALURU (REUTERS) - Facebook parent Meta Platforms will charge creators around 47.5 per cent on sales of digital assets and experiences made inside the company's virtual reality platform Horizon Worlds.

The overall charge comprises a 30 per cent hardware platform fee for sales made through Meta Quest Store, where it sells apps and games meant for its virtual reality headsets, and a further 17.5 per cent cut as its Horizon platform fee, a Meta spokesman told Reuters on Wednesday (April 13).

On Monday, the tech giant said it would start testing tools for creators to sell digital assets and in turn make money on Horizon Worlds, a key part of its plan for creating a metaverse.

Meta chief executive officer Mark Zuckerberg has been a critic of Apple's App Store fees of 30 per cent, but Meta's latest move to charge creators nearly half their sales on its own platform has angered many of them.

The Facebook parent company, which changed its name to Meta last year, has invested heavily in virtual and augmented reality to reflect its new bet on the metaverse, a futuristic idea of a network of virtual environments accessed via different devices where users can work, socialise and play.

Meta's Horizon Worlds, an expansive virtual reality social platform, and Horizon Venues, which is focused on virtual events, are early iterations of metaverse-like spaces.

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