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OpenAI Kills Sora: The AI Video App That Shook Hollywood Is Being Shut Down

by Kingsley Okeke
March 24, 2026
in Artificial Intelligence
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Techsoma Africa

OpenAI is shutting down Sora, its AI-powered video-making app, just months after it launched to massive buzz. The company announced the news on Tuesday, March 24, 2026, on X, giving little explanation but promising to say more soon.

“We’re saying goodbye to Sora. To everyone who created with Sora, shared it, and built a community around it: thank you. What you made with Sora mattered, and we know this news is disappointing,” the Sora team wrote.

From Internet Sensation to Shutdown

To understand why this is a big deal, you need to know what Sora was. It was a tool that let anyone type a text prompt and get back a short, surprisingly realistic video in seconds.

When OpenAI first showed it off in early 2024, it caused panic in Hollywood. Filmmaker Tyler Perry reportedly put an $800 million studio construction project on hold because he feared AI video would make traditional filmmaking obsolete.

In September 2025, OpenAI released a newer, better version of Sora that could also generate sound alongside video. The app hit number one in the iOS App Store’s video category within a day of launch. It seemed unstoppable.

Then people stopped using it.

By January 2026, the numbers told a different story. Downloads were falling every month, and users weren’t spending money on it. In December 2025, Sora saw a 32 percent drop in new downloads compared to November. For a product OpenAI had staked so much on, that was a serious warning sign.

It Comes Down to Money

OpenAI is not a charity. The company is currently valued at $730 billion and is reportedly preparing for a stock market listing. To make that happen, it needs to show investors it can focus its resources and turn a profit, not burn money on apps that are losing users.

CEO Sam Altman has reportedly told staff that shutting Sora down will free up money and engineering talent for more important projects. The company’s next goal is building a single “super app” that combines ChatGPT, its coding tool Codex, and other features into one product. Think of it like combining WhatsApp, Google, and a personal assistant into one app.

Disney Loses a Billion-Dollar Deal

The fallout goes beyond just the app. In late 2024, Disney announced a landmark $1 billion investment in OpenAI tied directly to Sora. The agreement would have allowed Sora users to generate videos featuring characters from Disney, Marvel, Pixar, and Star Wars. It was the kind of deal that made OpenAI look like the future of entertainment.

That deal is now cancelled. According to someone familiar with the situation, Disney never actually sent the money, so no funds changed hands. Disney released a polite statement saying it “respects OpenAI’s decision” and will continue exploring AI partnerships elsewhere.

What This Means for Everyone Else

OpenAI has said its Sora engineers will shift to working on AI for robotics and physical tasks: essentially, teaching machines to understand and navigate the real world. So the research that powered Sora isn’t disappearing; it’s just being pointed in a different direction.

With Sora gone, Google is now better positioned to lead in AI video, as one of the few companies with the resources to compete in that space.

For regular users who enjoyed experimenting with Sora, the app will stop working, and there’s no announced replacement from OpenAI. Alternatives like Google’s Veo and other AI video tools remain available, but none had the same cultural moment Sora did.

 

Kingsley Okeke

Kingsley Okeke

I'm a skilled content writer, anatomist, and researcher with a strong academic background in human anatomy. I hold a degree...

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