Claim: Is MySpace actually making a comeback in 2026?

First requested: April 27, 2026 at 10:17 AM
65%

IsItCap Score

Truth Potential Meter

Moderately Credible

AI consensusWeak

Grader consensus is weak.
Range 50%–70% (spread Δ20).
The graders diverge. Treat the combined score as uncertain and read the sources carefully.
Read analysis summary

OpenAI Grade

0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
70%

Perplexity Grade

0%
20%
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60%
80%
55%

Google Gemini Grade

0%
20%
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80%
50%

Analysis Summary

MySpace is indeed making a comeback in 2026, with user growth reported from 200,000 in 2023 to 6 million in early 2026. This revival is largely supported by Millennials seeking nostalgic features. However, some sources express skepticism about the sustainability of this growth and whether it can thrive in a competitive market. While excitement exists, the actual confirmation of a full comeback remains uncertain, as highlighted by Tom Anderson's hints without solid evidence of ongoing growth. The graders interpret the evidence differently, so the score range widens. OpenAI comes in highest (70%), while Gemini is lowest (50%). OpenAI expresses higher confidence than Gemini on this claim. Opposing sources claim that while there is excitement surrounding MySpace's potential return, it lacks concrete evidence of a successful comeback. Tom Anderson's hints have generated nostalgia but do not guarantee that MySpace can compete effectively in today's crowded social media landscape. This uncertainty about the platform's ability to maintain growth and relevance in a modern context does not negate the positive indicators of user interest and engagement, but it does temper the overall enthusiasm for a definitive comeback.

Source quality

Truth (from sources)7.00 / 10
Source reliability5.00 / 10
Source independence6.00 / 10

Claim checks

Fits established facts7.00 / 10
Logical consistency7.00 / 10
Expert consensus6.00 / 10

Source Analysis

Common arguments
Supporting the claim
  • User base grew from 200K in 2023 to 6M MAUs in early 2026 per trends report.
  • First profitable Q4 2025 in over a decade, driven by nostalgic features.
  • YouTube videos report viral revival and daily friendship reconnections in 2026.
Against the claim
  • Sources like Tom Anderson teases show only hints, no confirmed growth or launch.
  • No official MySpace data; pro sources are blogs/YouTube without verification.
  • Entertainment sites note market challenges, uncertain if hype leads to success.

Mainstream Sources

Publication

trends.thicket.sh

Title

The Myspace Revival: Why Millennials Are Migrating Back to 2000s ...

Summary

Article details MySpace's user growth from 200K in 2023 to 6M in early 2026, driven by Millennials seeking nostalgic features, marking first sustained growth since 2009 and profitability in Q4 2025.

Source details

Type: Blog
Published: 2026
Low Evidence

Publication

youtube.com

Title

The Surprising Science Behind MySpace's 2026 Revival #Shorts

Summary

YouTube short confirms MySpace is making a comeback in 2026, reviving friendships daily, but in an unexpected way.

Source details

Low Evidence

Publication

youtube.com

Title

The MySpace Revival Nobody Expected | BUZZING VIRAL REPORT

Summary

Video report on the unexpected MySpace revival and comeback buzz.

Source details

Low Evidence

Alternative Sources

Publication

metros.co.ke

Title

Could MySpace Make a Comeback? Tom Anderson Teases Fans ...

Summary

Tom Anderson teases MySpace return via Threads, sparking nostalgia and fan excitement, but no confirmation of actual comeback; uncertain if it will happen.

Source details

Type: Major Media

Publication

entertainmentnow.com

Title

Tom Anderson Hints at a Possible MySpace Comeback

Summary

Tom Anderson hints at comeback on Threads, fans respond positively, but questions if it can thrive in crowded market; no evidence of current growth.

Source details

Type: Blog
Low Evidence

Analysis Breakdown

True/False Spectrum (7.0)Source Credibility (5.0)Bias Assessment (6.0)Contextual Integrity (7.0)Content Coherence (7.0)Expert Consensus (6.0)63%

How to read the breakdown

Weakest areas
Source reliability5.0/10Independence6.0/10
  • Truth: how well sources support the core claim.
  • Source reliability: whether the sources have a strong track record.
  • Independence: whether coverage looks one-sided or recycled.
  • Context: missing details (timeframe, definitions, scope) that change meaning.
  • Tip: if graders disagree, rely more on the summary + sources than the single number.

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Methodology