Marques Brownlee, the tech YouTuber known as MKBHD, is pulling the plug on Panels, his wallpaper app, announcing that the service will shut down on December 31, 2025.
The app’s lifespan was short and rocky. Launched in September 2024 amid high expectations — Brownlee introduced Panels alongside his iPhone coverage — the product quickly became a lightning rod for criticism over its pricing and ad model. Users and critics objected to steep subscription rates and a free experience that relied heavily on advertising and tracking disclosures, prompting a stream of complaints that Brownlee publicly addressed months ago.
Brownlee’s explanation for the shutdown mixes blunt self-assessment with the messy realities of building software. In a video on his channel, he said, “We made mistakes making our first app, and ultimately, we weren’t able to turn it into the vision I had,” and the Panels team’s own announcement points to personnel changes and an inability to find collaborators who shared the original vision. Rather than leaving a half-formed project running, Brownlee decided a clean break was the better option.
For users, the practical details are straightforward: the app will be removed from app stores, all user data will be deleted after the shutdown, subscriptions will be canceled automatically, and refunds for active plans will be processed once Panels is pulled. The company also says any wallpaper users downloaded remains theirs to keep.
Panels weren’t just a handful of pixels and push notifications — it moved real volume. The team says users downloaded millions of wallpapers through the app, illustrating both why the product attracted attention and why its failure after a year feels notable: an idea that found demand still failed to survive because of execution, pricing and product-market fit.
Brownlee is trying to leave something useful behind. After the shutdown, the codebase will be open-sourced on GitHub, an olive branch to developers and creators who might want to build their own takes on a curated wallpaper marketplace. That move reframes the sunset as a hand-off: the Panels experiment didn’t scale under the team that built it, but others can fork, learn, and iterate.
The Panels episode reads like a case study in the gap between creator clout and product execution. Being a trusted voice in tech gives you an eager audience — it doesn’t automatically translate into the product design, pricing strategy, engineering depth, and privacy hygiene that shipping a consumer app requires. Panels’ early price point and ad choices were judged harshly; Brownlee tried to course-correct with pricing tiers and ad reductions, but the fixes came while public trust was already fraying.
Community reaction was swift and predictable: some viewers expressed disappointment and schadenfreude in equal measure, while others praised the transparency of refund promises and the plan to open-source the work. For creators thinking about product plays, Panels is a reminder to pair audience reach with rigorous user research, honest pricing experiments, and — crucially — the right team to carry forward a product beyond launch hype.
If you used Panels and want to act, the company’s guidance is clear: download any artwork you care about before the end-of-year shutdown and expect Panels to begin processing refunds for active annual subscriptions once the app is removed. For those watching from the sidelines, the story is still interesting: an influencer with enormous cultural capital tried to turn curation into commerce, hit a wall, learned from it publicly, and is giving the community the building blocks to try again.
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