When you boil it down, every social media giant makes money the same way: You click on content, and they serve you ads.
But a France-based social app wants to do it differently — and it’s taking inspiration from video games. Yubo ($19.5m raised) only makes money when users pay for small, in-app purchases called micro-transactions.
When you log in, all you see are chats hosted by total strangers. They’re grouped according to age, location, and theme.
You might have a chat for 18-year-old college freshmen or one for diehard Selling Sunset fans.
And that’s all there is to Yubo. The company hasn’t just ditched advertising — it’s said goodbye to likes, followers, and almost all metrics.
The video game example shows that kids are more than willing to toss out a few dollars to get in-app upgrades. Last year, micro-transactions brought in $1.8B for Fortnite alone.
Yubo has a ton of small charges: Pay $2, and you can send your chatroom to the top of the Yubo homepage for a few minutes.
Not so much. Last year, Yubo brought in $10m in revenue — still a tiny sum compared to the billions raked in by Facebook or TikTok.