Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. News

You might soon be able to play mini games inside Threads DMs

Meta is testing casual games designed to make conversations more fun.

Add as a preferred source on Google
A person using the Threads app on the OnePlus 13.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Meta appears to be exploring a new way to get users to spend more time in the Threads app. In a bid to keep users engaged, the company is reportedly testing a feature that could make private conversations a little more fun.

According to a recent post on X from reverse engineer Alessandro Paluzzi, Meta could soon introduce mini games to Threads DMs. An early screenshot of the feature reveals a basketball-themed game with a simple swipe-based mechanic that allows users to flick shots back and forth with friends while chatting.

#Threads is working on a basketball game 🏀 for chats 👀 pic.twitter.com/LGp22SLwRI

— Alessandro Paluzzi (@alex193a) January 4, 2026

This feature seems less about competitive gaming and more about adding a casual distraction to help users keep the conversation going. While it is still in development and not publicly available yet, the feature points to Meta’s broader efforts to make Threads more interactive and less text-heavy.

Recommended Videos

Since its launch, Threads has steadily picked up new features aimed at giving it an edge over rival platform X. We recently learned that Meta plans to add a new tool to help podcast creators share previews on Threads, and the company now appears to be turning its attention to features designed to boost everyday engagement.

Meta has previously tested games in DMs

According to TechCrunch, this isn’t the first time Meta has experimented with adding games to DMs. The company introduced a hidden emoji game to Instagram DMs last year with the objective of keeping an emoji bouncing for as long as possible using a paddle at the bottom of the screen.

For now, Meta has not officially commented on this discovery and there’s no word on when the game might reach your Threads DMs, if at all. It’s also unclear whether the basketball game will be the only option or if users will get to choose from a couple of different games.

Pranob Mehrotra
Pranob is a seasoned tech journalist with over eight years of experience covering consumer technology. His work has been…
You can’t block Meta’s AI bot on Threads. I don’t know what we did to deserve this.
Meta's new Threads AI chatbot cannot be blocked, and users are furious about losing basic control over their own feeds.
A verified account on Instagram Threads.

Meta rolled out its AI chatbot on Threads this week, and it comes with a catch you didn't agree to.

The new @meta.ai account, reported by Engadget, works a lot like Grok on X. You can tag it in a conversation, and it jumps in with answers about trending topics, live sports, entertainment, or breaking news.

Read more
Instagram’s new Instants tool is a brazen copycat of Snapchat and BeReal, but at least it keeps things real
Instagram launched Instants, a disappearing photo feature inspired by Snapchat and BeReal.
instagram-instants-app

Instagram has never been shy about borrowing ideas, and its latest move makes that clearer than ever. The platform just globally launched Instants, a new feature that lets you share disappearing, unedited photos with your Close Friends or mutual followers.

The standalone Instants app is now available on iOS and Android, which opens directly to the camera when you log in with your Instagram account.

Read more
Instagram’s teen crackdown moves from DMs to feeds
Meta is adding parental insight into teen algorithms after tightening how young users communicate
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Instagram’s teen crackdown is moving deeper into the feed.

Meta’s new supervision tools will show parents which broad topics are shaping a teen’s Instagram algorithm, including signals that affect Reels and Explore, with Feed support coming later. The timing matters because Instagram’s safety push is no longer focused only on who teens can message. It now reaches the recommendation system that decides what keeps showing up.

Read more