The core of the company's metaverse efforts is the Quest headset app, which Meta has poured billions of dollars into.
It has become more of a laughing stock than a virtual world.
According to leaked memos, Zuck's metaverse is so glitchy that the employees building it barely use it. According to his September 15 memo, the situation has become dire enough for Metaverse VP Vishal Shah to enforce a quality lock out for the remainder of the year to ensure that we fix our quality gaps and performance issues before we open upHorizon to more users.
Shah issued another memo showing the state of the game and the workplace.
According to feedback from our creators, users, playtesters, and many of us on the team, the weight of paper cuts, stability issues, and bugs is making it too hard for our community to experience the magic ofHorizon.
For an experience to be delightful and retentive, it must first be usable and well crafted.
It seems like a superfluous way of saying that. A product that is meant to be at the forefront of a tech giant's vision for the future isn't the kind of praise you would want to hear.
Meta can have all the money it wants, but it doesn't matter if the developers aren't behind it That could be indicative of a flawed vision, management or product.
Shah wrote in a September 15 memo that many people don't spend a lot of time in the program.
What is that? We love our product so much that we use it all the time. How can we expect our users to like it if we don't love it?
Shah had reached his limit by the end of the month.
The VP wrote that everyone in the organization should fall in love with the show.
You need to love them. Love is what makes the metaverse happen. Don't you like it as well?
There is more on the metaverse.