OpenAI’s AI video generator Sora is officially done, less than a year after it went viral. At first glance, it’s easy to assume the shutdown was about safety concerns or creative backlash. But the real story is far less dramatic.
So why did OpenAI actually shut Sora down?
According to The Wall Street Journal, the biggest reason behind Sora’s untimely death wasn’t controversy. It came down to economics. The tool was incredibly expensive to run, reportedly costing OpenAI around $1 million per day due to massive compute demands. Generating realistic videos is significantly more resource-intensive than text or images, and scaling it for millions of users simply didn’t make financial sense for the company.
At the same time, user interest reportedly dropped in the months following Sora’s debut, with downloads and engagement declining sharply. This turned OpenAI’s viral sensation into a costly tool with shrinking returns. In other words, it wasn’t just expensive, it was also losing momentum.
Despite earlier reports suggesting OpenAI was planning to integrate Sora’s video generation capabilities into ChatGPT, that plan now appears to be off the table.
How Sora’s fall reflects a broader industry shift
Sora’s shutdown isn’t about one product failing. It has more to do with where AI companies are heading next. Like Anthropic, OpenAI is moving away from flashy consumer features and toward productivity tools that promise clearer revenue and long-term impact.
This marks a subtle but important shift. Over the past two years, AI companies have raced to showcase what their models can do. Now, the focus is shifting to what people will actually pay for. That distinction is starting to separate experimental features from sustainable products.
OpenAI’s recent strategy reflects that reality. The company is doubling down on tools like Codex, which can write code and automate software tasks, and Deep Research, which can generate detailed reports in minutes. It’s also expanding integrations with workspace tools, positioning ChatGPT as something closer to a productivity assistant than a simple chatbot that answers your everyday queries.
This doesn’t mean AI video generation is going away altogether. But Sora’s shutdown makes one thing clear: impressive demos aren’t enough. If a product can’t scale sustainably or generate substantial revenue, it won’t last.
Sora, despite its undeniable wow factor, simply didn’t fit that future.






