TikTok’s 15 seconds of fame isn’t over yet, but leave it to Instagram to pop up with a notification and divert your attention. The platform is officially launching Reels, its long-rumored set of tools to create and share short-form video.

Reels provides all the trappings of TikTok, built directly into the Instagram camera. There’s the maximum video length of 15 seconds. There are the editing tools like a timer, countdown clock, and camera effects. There’s the library of licensed music and user-recorded audio tracks. There’s even a new dedicated space in the Explore tab where published reels will live, in all their full-screen, sound-on glory. Reels is available to Instagram users in more than 50 countries, including the US, starting today.

Courtesy of Instagram

Short-form video is nothing new, but it has become impossible to ignore after the breakout success of TikTok over the past year. The app, which launched globally in 2018, has since captured the attention of 500 million users who have fallen in love with TikTok’s viral dances, gymnastic challenges, comedy routines, and all-out randomness delivered by a personalized algorithm. It’s become a cultural force for introducing new artists, and advertisers are increasingly eager to be there too. Other apps for short-form video, like Dubsmash, Byte, and Triller, have emerged with similar formats. Instagram’s parent company, Facebook, also tried to replicate TikTok two years ago with a stand-alone app called Lasso, though it never quite took off.

Instagram says its users have been thirsting for this kind of content. In the past month, 45 percent of the videos uploaded to the Instagram feed were 15 seconds or less, the company says. (At least some of those videos were originally TikToks, ripped from that app and reposted to Instagram.) With Reels, Instagram hopes to both host those videos and enable “the next generation of content creators.”

Instagram’s product team started testing Reels last year in Brazil. Facebook’s experience with Lasso, which finally shut down last month, proved educational. “One of the learnings was that a new stand-alone app, while flexible, requires you to build an audience,” says Vishal Shah, Instagram’s head of product. Building something within Instagram, which has more than a billion users, seemed like an obvious next step. Originally Reels was built into Stories, as an extension of that feature’s existing video-creation tools. Soon, though, Instagram saw that it wasn’t a fit. People didn’t want to spend time crafting would-be viral videos that disappeared in just 24 hours, and they wanted a chance for them to be discovered by an audience beyond just their followers.

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