Tinder pulls back on Metaverse dating plans

Match Group, the parent company of popular dating app Tinder, says it is cutting funding for Web3-related research and development amid disappointing Q2 earnings and the departure of Tinder’scurrent CEO.ย 

In a letter to shareholders on Aug. 2, Match Group CEO Bernard Kim revealed that it will be scaling back its Metaverse investments as well as scrapping plans to release an in-app virtual currency called Tinder Coins.

The move also comes alongside the resignation of Tinder CEO Renate Nyborg, the companyโ€™s first female CEO that had initially set out plans to introduce the โ€œTinderverseโ€ after acquiring a video-AI and augmented reality company called Hyperconnect in 2021.

Nyborg had planned for Hyperconnect to further develop its avatar-based โ€œSingle Townโ€ experience as a way for Tinder users to meet and interact with one another in virtual spaces in the future.

While Kim did not explicitly state reasons for Nyborgโ€™s departure, he highlighted that Tinder โ€œhas not been able to realize the monetization success that we typically deliverโ€ throughout the past few quarters.

In his letter, Kim said that Match Group would continue to watch the Metaverse space but would prefer to wait for the โ€œappropriate time.โ€

โ€œI believe a Metaverse dating experience is important to capture the next generation of users […] However, given uncertainty about the ultimate contours of the Metaverse and what will or wonโ€™t work [โ€ฆ] Iโ€™ve instructed the Hyperconnect team to iterate but not invest heavily in [the] Metaverse at this time.โ€

Kim went on to disclose that plans to release an in-app virtual currency, Tinder Coins had also been scrapped due to โ€œmixed resultsโ€ from testing.

โ€œAfter seeing mixed results from testing Tinder Coins, weโ€™ve decided to take a step back and re-examine that initiative so that it can more effectively contribute to Tinderโ€™s revenue.โ€

โ€œWe also intend to do more thinking about virtual goods to ensure that they can be a real driver for Tinderโ€™s next leg of growth and help us unlock the untapped power users on the platform,โ€ he added.

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โ€œWeโ€™ll continue to evaluate this space carefully, and we will consider moving forward at the appropriate time when we have more clarity on the overall opportunity and feel we have a service that is well-positioned to succeed.โ€

The company reported a 12% year-on-year growth in total revenue in Q2 2022, reaching $795 million, alongside a $10 million operating loss due to impairments relating to its Hyperconnect acquisition.

Match Group stock is down 11.39% over the last five days to $63.24 at the time of writing.