Meta is developing a standalone prediction markets application internally known as “Arena,” marking the company’s latest move into a growing digital market that has attracted increasing user participation and investor interest.
The project, reportedly backed by Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, would allow users to make predictions on future events using a points-based system rather than real-money wagers. The application is expected to operate independently from Meta’s existing platforms, including Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Messenger.
The initiative comes as prediction markets such as Polymarket and Kalshi continue to expand beyond niche financial and crypto communities into broader discussions around politics, sports, entertainment, and economic events.
Meta Revisits a Familiar Experiment
Arena is not Meta’s first attempt to build a forecasting platform. In 2020, the company launched Forecast, a crowdsourced prediction tool that encouraged users to estimate future outcomes and discuss their reasoning. The project relied on virtual points rather than financial incentives and was discontinued in 2022 after limited adoption.
Key reported features include:
- Standalone mobile application separate from Meta’s social platforms
- Points-based participation system rather than cash betting
- Markets covering sports, politics, entertainment, and current events
- Potential integration with Meta’s broader social ecosystem for user acquisition
- Possibility of real-money participation being considered for future versions
Why Meta Is Looking at Prediction Markets
Prediction markets have become one of the fastest-growing categories on the internet over the past two years. Platforms such as Polymarket and Kalshi allow users to trade contracts tied to real-world outcomes, creating market-based forecasts on elections, economic indicators, sporting events, and breaking news developments. As the sector expands, platforms are also strengthening compliance measures, with recent discussions around Kalshi employment verification requirements reflecting the growing focus on market integrity and participant oversight.
Industry observers point to several factors driving growth:
- Increased interest in alternative forecasting tools
- Higher engagement during major political and sporting events
- Growing acceptance of event-based trading products
- Expansion of regulated prediction market offerings in the United States
For Meta, the category represents a potential new avenue for user engagement at a time when social media growth is becoming increasingly mature across developed markets. At the same time, industry participants are pursuing regional expansion strategies aimed at creating a more comprehensive Prediction Markets Platform Across Asia-Pacific.
Another Bet on Emerging Digital Trends
Arena would join a long list of Meta initiatives aimed at identifying and capitalizing on emerging internet behaviors. Over the past decade, the company has pursued major investments in:
- Virtual and augmented reality through Reality Labs
- Digital payments and stablecoin infrastructure
- Creator monetization tools
- Artificial intelligence products and assistants
- Virtual worlds and metaverse technologies
Some of those efforts achieved scale, while others struggled to gain lasting adoption. Meta’s Libra stablecoin project was abandoned following regulatory opposition, and the company has reported tens of billions of dollars in cumulative losses through its metaverse-focused Reality Labs division. Meanwhile, the broader prediction market industry continues to expand globally, with companies such as Polymarket exploring opportunities around prediction markets in Japan as part of their long-term growth strategies. The development of Arena suggests Meta is continuing to explore new consumer behaviors outside its core social networking business as competition for user attention intensifies.
Regulatory Questions Remain
Prediction markets have also attracted increasing scrutiny from regulators and lawmakers. Critics argue that markets tied to real-world outcomes can create risks related to insider information, market manipulation, and gambling-like behavior. Regulators in several jurisdictions continue to debate how such platforms should be classified and supervised.
By launching Arena with a points-based system instead of real-money trading, Meta could initially avoid some of the regulatory challenges faced by competitors operating financial or wagering products.
However, any future move toward monetary participation would likely place the platform under greater regulatory oversight. For now, Arena remains under development, but Meta’s reported interest underscores how prediction markets have evolved from a niche online activity into a rapidly expanding segment attracting attention from technology companies, financial firms, and policymakers alike.
FAQs
1. What is Meta’s Arena app?
Arena is a reported standalone prediction markets application being developed by Meta that would allow users to forecast future events using a points-based system.
2. Will Arena use real money betting?
Current reports indicate the platform is being designed around virtual points. However, Meta has reportedly not ruled out real-money participation in the future.
3. How is Arena different from Polymarket and Kalshi?
Unlike Polymarket and Kalshi, Arena is expected to launch without real-money trading and would operate as a standalone consumer app connected to Meta’s broader ecosystem.
4. Has Meta built a prediction platform before?
Yes. Meta launched a forecasting product called Forecast in 2020, which allowed users to make predictions using points. The service was shut down in 2022 after limited adoption.















