
AI agent acquisition is no longer theoretical. Meta Platforms, Inc., the company behind Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, just made its most literal move in AI yet, acquiring Manus, the Singapore-based developer of a general AI agent built to turn thoughts into actions, in a deal reportedly valued at $2.5 billion. This was not a talent grab or a research flex. This was Meta buying execution. Manus is named for “hand,” and Meta did not buy a mouth. It bought something that actually does the work.
Manus emerged from Butterfly Effect, founded in 2022, after the team proved they could scale with Monica.im, a browser-based AI assistant that reached 10 million users. Manus launched publicly around March 5 to March 6, 2025, and immediately separated itself from the pack by refusing to sit still. Instead of answering prompts, it completed tasks. Research, coding, web builds, multi step workflows. By mid December 2025, Manus crossed $100 million in ARR in roughly eight months and hit a $125 million revenue run rate. That pace is not marketing. That is velocity.
The product numbers explain the urgency. By October 15, 2025, Manus 1.5 cut average task completion time from about 15 minutes to under four. The platform had processed more than 147 trillion tokens and spun up over 80 million virtual computers. Manus does not just reason. It orchestrates. It coordinates multiple agents, leans on models like Claude from Anthropic and Qwen from Alibaba, and focuses relentlessly on the layer most AI products avoid, finishing the job.
The people behind it mattered just as much as the metrics. Founder and CEO Xiao Hong now steps into Meta as a VP reporting to Meta COO Javier Olivan. Chief Scientist Ji Yichao helped define what “agent” actually means when it is measured by output, not demos. Product Lead Zhang Tao brought consumer discipline to a category that often forgets humans once the model works. Mark Zuckerberg is betting that this team’s bias toward action can scale across billions of users without breaking trust or momentum.
For Meta, the signal is clear. After spending heavily on infrastructure and foundational models, this acquisition pulls the stack down to the ground. Manus brings proof that people will pay for AI that closes loops instead of opening tabs. It brings revenue, not promises. And it brings a product philosophy that treats intention as unfinished business until something concrete exists on the other side.
If AI is moving from conversation to execution, this AI agent acquisition shows Meta is done waiting for that shift to arrive organically. The question now is not whether agents are coming. It is where this one is going to put its hands first.

