Meta is rolling out a new app with a social feed of vibe-coded mini games

4 hours ago 4

meta new app pocket

Meta's new app "Pocket" lets people make interactive social posts. Getty Images; Tyler Le/BI

Get ready for another Meta app.

Meta is rolling out Pocket, a new social AI app, Business Insider has learned. Meta describes the Pocket as a platform to "create, share, and discover gizmos with friends."

The app is listed on Meta's Help Center and in the Google Play Store. The timeline and rollout regions are unclear. It was not available to download in the US on Thursday. Meta did not respond to a request for comment.

"The Pocket app is not yet available everywhere," Meta's Help Center says. "If it is available for you, some features may not yet be available in your area."

What's a "gizmo," you ask?

It's basically a mini-game you can create by typing out a prompt. In Meta's words, "a gizmo is an interactive, playable AI-generated experience."

For instance, you could prompt Pocket to create a gizmo that turns a flower into a paintbrush, letting you draw an image with that flower-brush on the touchscreen.

Screenshot of Pocket app from Meta

Interactive posts on Pocket are called "gizmos."  Screenshot/Google Play Store/Meta

Meta's family of apps has grown well beyond Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. It has introduced new social apps like Threads and Forum, as well as several new AI apps that build on Meta's focus on artificial intelligence.

Business Insider exclusively reported in March that Meta had hired the team behind Atma Sciences Inc., which built an app called Gizmo. It also acquired a non-exclusive license to the startup's tech. Meta declined to disclose the financial details of the deal at the time.

A few months after scooping up the team, Meta appears to be cashing in on the gizmo experience with its new stand-alone app, Pocket.

Gizmo app

Gizmo, by Atma Sciences Inc., had over 14,000 ratings on Apple's App Store with a 4.9 score.  Sccreenshot/Apple App Store

The app is listed on Google's Play Store and is pitched as a social feed where users can vibe code their own interactive games or content:

Scroll a feed of gizmos from people around the world. Gizmos respond to your touch and the tilt of your phone. They play sound effects and your favorite songs. They can use your camera or pull in photos from your camera roll. Some can even reason about the world around them.

Alessandro Paluzzi, a developer who reverse-engineers Meta's apps to reveal internal tests, spotted that Pocket will be promoted within Meta's apps alongside a growing portfolio that includes Instants (Instagram's latest Snapchat-like app).

Pocket isn't the only app trying to build out a social feed around vibe-coded games. Sekai, an app with a similar premise, recently raised $20 million in Series A funding.

As some social feeds start to feel stale — and less social — interactive games could be a way to reignite engagement. TikTok has also experimented with its own feed of mini games.

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Sydney Bradley has been covering media and tech for Business Insider since 2020. She breaks news and writes extensively about Instagram and Facebook, as well as new platforms and startups shaping social media, dating apps, the creator economy, venture capital, and tech culture.Sydney's reporting on Instagram was nominated as a finalist for the 2021 Los Angeles Press Club National Entertainment Journalism Awards.She graduated from the University of Virginia with a degree in American Studies. You can follow Sydney's work on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram at @sydneykbradley.Have a tip? You can also contact her via encrypted messaging app Signal (@sydneykbradley.123), encrypted email ([email protected]), or standard email ([email protected]). Use a personal email address, a nonwork WiFi network, and a nonwork device; here’s our guide to sharing information securely.Selected stories:

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