Something is stirring in the entertainment industry. The old model of packing arenas and selling overpriced merchandise is being quietly challenged. Data from Q3 shows virtual reality concerts are now generating more revenue than physical tours for three major artists. One source close to a top label told me this is 'the beginning of the end for touring as we know it.'
The figures are stark. A single VR event for a headline act can now pull in £45 million from ticket sales and digital merch, with no venue costs, no transport, no insurance. Physical tours are haemorrhaging money. The numbers don't lie. The lobby for live events is panicking.
Who is driving this? I've been asking around. The tech giants are pushing hard. Meta has been courting managers with six-figure exclusivity deals. Apple is rumoured to be building a dedicated VR venue in London. The artists themselves are divided. Some see the money and the global reach. Others fear losing the tribal energy of a real crowd.
The real story is the silent shift in fan behaviour. My polling sources tell me that under-25s are now more likely to attend a VR gig than a physical one. They cite convenience, price, and the ability to 'share the experience' with friends across the world. The old guard call it a fad. They are wrong.
Cabinet whispers suggest the Culture Secretary is eyeing a review of ticketing laws to cover virtual events. There is a power struggle behind closed doors. The physical tour operators have MPs in their pockets. But the Treasury sees the tax potential in VR. Money talks.
This is not a prediction. It is a live countdown. The next six months will see at least two more major acts go fully virtual. The 'tour' is dying. Watch who jumps first. That will tell you everything.
Eleanor Rigby, Political Bureau Chief








