Skip to main content

Yahoo Livetext and Games face axe in ‘streamlining’ plan

Yahoo Logo
Ken Wolter / Shutterstock
Chop, chop, chop. Yahoo’s ongoing cuts may have some wondering if the company is opening a butcher shop, but the Web giant insists it’s merely streamlining its business, stripping away the fat to improve efficiency and make it a more attractive package for potential buyers.

Following a recent announcement that it will shed 15 percent of its 11,000-strong workforce and shutter a load of online magazines, the company said over the weekend that it’s also culling its Livetext and Yahoo Games products, as well as a number of regional properties such as Yahoo Astrology that operates in the UK, France, Germany, Spain, and India.

Livetext, which closes at the end of this month, lasted a mere eight months. The app, a mix of instant chat and FaceTime-style video, was a curious effort as it had no audio, leaving users to gawk at one another while tapping out messages.

According to Yahoo, the idea was that doing away with audio placed your real-time reactions at the center of the conversation, though it’s quite possible many of those reactions included frustrated users mouthing the words “let’s switch to WhatsApp” to each other.

The company said it plans to “incorporate the learnings and features into Yahoo products including Yahoo Messenger,” its core messaging platform.

As for Yahoo Games, that’s being shown the door on May 13 after 18 years of operation. Many of the games were removed from the portal in 2014, and now the Sunnyvale, California-based company has decided to send the remaining titles the same way in a couple of months’ time. And Yahoo Astrology, in case you were wondering, will disappear “in the coming weeks.”

In the last year the business has also axed Yahoo Screen and Yahoo Maps.

Yahoo said during its last earnings call it planned to simplify its business by focusing on seven core consumer products: Mail, Search, Tumblr, News, Sports, Finance, and Lifestyle. Struggling in recent years, the company is reportedly looking to sell its core Web business, with the Wall Street Journal in recent days suggesting it’s currently reaching out to “a list of about 40 potential suitors, including Verizon and Time,” as well as several private-equity firms.

Editors' Recommendations

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
April’s most anticipated RPG is coming to Xbox Game Pass
Key art for Eiyuden Chronicle Hundred Heroes.

We've learned about the titles that will come to Xbox Game Pass throughout the back half of April, and several of them are games getting added to the catalog the day they launch. Of those, the most notable is Eiyuden Chronicle: Hundred Heroes.

While that name is a mouthful, RPG fans will want to pay attention to Eiyuden Chronicle: Hundred Heroes as it is a spiritual successor to the long-dormant Konami RPG series Suikoden. Many of the developers who worked on the original Suikoden games worked together to reimagine the concept for the modern era, creating an RPG with over 100 recruitable party members, engaging combat, and a gorgeous pixelated art style that gives Square Enix's HD-2D games a run for their money. Prequel game Eiyuden Chronicle: Rising is already on Xbox Game Pass too, so Microsoft seems all-in on backing this Suikoden successor as we wait for Konami to release remasters of those titles or a new game in the series.

Read more
This satisfying $7 mobile puzzle game is money well spent
A box in Boxes: Lost Fragments has an octopus on it.

If you're looking for a new mobile game that'll keep your hands busy and you have $7 to spare, Boxes: Lost Fragments is money well spent.

Developed by Big Loop Studios, Boxes: Lost Fragments is a moody puzzle game where players are tasked with opening 20 intricately designed, themed puzzle boxes, all while unearthing a creepy gothic narrative. If that sounds a lot like The Room series, it is. You can either read Boxes as a total ripoff or a respectful homage, but one thing is certain in either case: It's extremely satisfying.

Read more
If you love Amazon’s Fallout, play the series’ best games on Game Pass and PS Plus next
Two characters in power armor in Fallout 4.

The Fallout TV series just released on Amazon Prime, and it's one of the best video game adaptations out there. It perfectly captures the tense, humorous feel of the postapocalyptic video game series while telling a new story with original characters. If you've just watched the show, you're probably itching to play a Fallout title again or check out one of the games the series is based on for the first time. Thankfully, if you're subscribed to one of the major video game subscription services, that's very easy to do.

Fallout, Fallout 2, Fallout Tactics, Fallout 3, Fallout: New Vegas, Fallout 4, and Fallout 76 are all on at least one gaming subscription service. While PC and Xbox players will be looking to Xbox Game Pass, PlayStation owners can get in on the fun with PS Plus Extra's game catalog. We've combed through what's available on PC Game Pass, Xbox Game Pass, and PS Plus Extra, and there's no shortage of options. Here are the best starting points on each service.
PC Game Pass

Read more