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Meta Developing Standalone Prediction Markets App Arena to Rival Polymarket and Kalshi

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The decision by Meta to spin out a dedicated prediction markets application marks a deliberate shift in how the largest social media conglomerate treats user engagement around event outcomes. According to the original report , CEO Mark Zuckerberg has ordered an internal team to build Arena, an app intentionally separated from Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Messenger. The product copies the structure used by Polymarket and Kalshi but launches with a points mechanism instead of real-money wagering. That design choice sidesteps immediate gambling licensing while leaving a clear path toward monetization down the line.

A Second Attempt After Forecast’s Failure

This is not Meta’s first experiment with crowd prediction. The company ran a nearly identical product called Forecast from 2020 until 2022 before quietly shutting it down. That earlier attempt failed to gain lasting traction, partly because it was buried inside the Facebook ecosystem and tied to a corporate identity that made some users skeptical about privacy and data handling. Arena, by contrast, operates as a standalone app, suggesting the company now believes prediction markets need a distinct brand and user experience to attract the audience that already migrates to Polymarket and Kalshi.

Points-based participation serves as a sandbox for Meta to gauge user numbers, retention, and event quality without triggering the regulatory scrutiny that real-money betting would invite. Yet the timeline for shutting down Forecast right before crypto-native prediction markets exploded raises questions about whether Meta misjudged the market window. The resurgence of interest in decentralized and centralized event betting now forces Meta to catch up.

Why Timing Matters for the Prediction Markets Sector

Prediction markets have moved from niche DeFi experiments to mainstream instruments this cycle. Polymarket handled over $1 billion in monthly volume during the 2024 US elections, and Kalshi obtained CFTC clearance to offer election contracts. The user behavior Meta cites is not hypothetical; it is measurable across blockchains and regulated venues. The broader tokenization trend crossing $20 billion on-chain mirrors the appetite for real-world information markets, where people trade on outcomes ranging from elections to economic data releases. Meta’s entry validates that behavior for a much larger advertising and data-driven business.

But the product’s initial design matters. A points-based system might attract casual users who find crypto interfaces too complex or real-money stakes intimidating. If Arena captures that demographic, Meta could eventually layer a financial layer on top—tapping into the same impulse that drove recent institutional adoption of crypto assets like Sui as payment rails and user engagement tools converge.

The Regulatory and Competitive Landscape

Prediction markets sit uncomfortably between gambling, derivatives trading, and free speech in the United States. The CFTC has wrestled with event contracts, and state-level gaming commissions maintain separate rulebooks. Meta, already under antitrust and content moderation scrutiny, steps into this ambiguity with Arena. Regulatory pressures around crypto and prediction markets could tighten if lawmakers view Meta’s scale as a systemic risk, even if the app initially avoids real-money trading.

Polymarket operates on Polygon, settling directly in USDC, and Kalshi uses a central limit order book with fiat custody. Arena’s technical architecture remains unknown, but any future pivot to real-money settlement would force Meta to choose between integrating stablecoins, partnering with a licensed exchange, or building proprietary payment infrastructure. That path runs directly into a banking lobby that already opposes crypto-friendly legislation in Congress.

The real competitive threat for existing platforms is not the points system but Meta’s distribution muscle. If Arena taps Facebook login, Instagram discoverability, or WhatsApp sharing while remaining technically separate, it could funnel hundreds of millions of users into prediction markets without requiring seed phrases or exchange accounts. Polymarket and Kalshi cannot match that reach, even if their permissionless nature and regulatory head start give them an edge among crypto-native users.

What Remains Unclear

The source material leaves several gaps. There is no launch date, no disclosed team size, and no indication of whether Arena will operate on a blockchain or remain entirely off-chain. The absence of crypto rails does not rule out a future integration, but it does mean Meta avoids the balance sheet and compliance burden that comes with digital asset custody for now. User demand for a non-monetary prediction service is also unproven; the points model might struggle to attract the same intensity of engagement that real-money markets generate. Meta can afford to test that assumption, given its budget, but Forecast’s quiet end suggests product-market fit in prediction is not guaranteed.

The next signal to watch is whether Meta files any trademarks or patents tied to Arena’s settlement mechanisms. If the company moves toward blockchain-based receipts or tokenized points, it would indicate a deeper commitment to decentralized infrastructure. Until then, Arena remains a cautious experiment from a company that has seen both the power and the peril of launching standalone social products.

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