
OpenAI’s Sora app for Android just made a big splash in the app world. The artificial intelligence video creation tool pulled in close to 470,000 downloads on its very first day in the Google Play Store. This puts the Android version way ahead of what the iPhone version managed to do when it first came out.
The numbers are quite something when you look at them closely. Sora grabbed about 470,000 installs from people across different countries where the app became available. That’s more than four times what the iPhone launch brought in. When you break down the figures, the Android version got 327 percent more downloads than what iOS users grabbed during their launch day.
But here’s the thing about comparing these numbers directly. The iPhone version only went live in the United States and Canada when it first dropped. Plus, you needed a special invite code to get in. The Android version, on the other hand, opened up in seven different markets right from day one. People in the United States, Canada, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam could all grab the app without any invite requirements in some of those places.
Most of those Android downloads came from the United States. About 296,000 out of the total 470,000 installs happened in America. This shows that even after the buzz from the iPhone launch died down a bit, people still really wanted to try out this AI video maker. The interest hasn’t gone away at all.
What makes Sora stand out is how it lets anyone create videos using artificial intelligence. You just type in what you want to see, and the app makes a video for you. There’s also something called Cameos that lets you put yourself and your friends into AI-created videos. The whole thing works a bit like TikTok, where you can scroll through videos other people have made and see what everyone else is doing with the technology.
The folks at OpenAI clearly hit something that people want. Making your own AI videos isn’t just for tech experts anymore. Regular people are downloading this app in huge numbers because they want to play around with it and see what they can create. The social feed part of the app makes it even more interesting since you can check out what other users are making and get ideas for your own videos.
When the iPhone version first came out back in late September, it managed about 110,000 downloads on the first day. The revised numbers show it did better than the original estimates suggested, but still nowhere near what Android pulled off. Around 69,300 of those iPhone downloads came from users in the United States, while the rest came from Canada.
The Android launch came at a perfect time. OpenAI had already removed the invite requirement in late October for their biggest markets like the United States, Canada, Japan, and South Korea.
Sora now has to compete with other big names in the artificial intelligence space. Meta just released their Meta AI mobile app to users in Europe, and plenty of other companies are working on similar tools. But Sora’s early numbers suggest it has grabbed people’s attention in a way that not many apps manage to do anymore.
The app has been growing steadily since its iPhone launch. Data from earlier showed that downloads kept coming in at a good pace even days after the initial release. People were installing it anywhere from 84,400 to over 107,000 times per day in those early weeks. That kind of staying power shows this isn’t just a one-day wonder that fades away quickly.
What OpenAI has done with Sora is bring professional-level video creation tools to everyone’s pocket. You don’t need expensive equipment or years of training to make interesting videos anymore. The AI handles the heavy lifting while you focus on the creative ideas. That’s probably why so many people rushed to download it as soon as it became available on Android.
The numbers speak for themselves. Getting close to half a million downloads on your first day is rare for any app, let alone one that’s still fairly new to most people. Sora has clearly struck a chord with users who want to experiment with AI video creation. As more people discover what they can do with it, those download numbers will likely keep climbing higher.
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