In 2025, Disney+ had several important milestones and developments. 

Examples include reaching 132 million global paid subscribers, securing the pan-European broadcast rights to the UEFA Women’s Champions League (UWCL) in a five-year deal, and inking a landmark multi-year content partnership with CJ ENM to bring South Korean streaming service Tving’s premium content to Japan. 

In short, Disney is aggressively fighting to dominate the streaming business.

In October, Disney+ raised the monthly price from $9.99 to $11.99 and an ad-free plan from $15.99 to $18.99 per month in September 2025, according to MacRumors. 

In November 2025, it was making headlines for failing to reach an agreement with YouTube TV, removing its content from the platform. During the two-week fallout, Disney was losing $4.3 million daily, according to a Nov. 9 analyst note shared with TheStreet. 

Even at that time, Disney was fearless. I covered how the company’s CFO dropped a bold warning that Disney is ready to fight as long as necessary.

Streaming competition is fiercer than ever, with the number of cord-cutters rising and companies fighting for their share of subscribers.

Disney just made another key move to compete with short-form video platforms like TikTok, YouTube Shorts, and Instagram.

Disney+ is adding vertical video format to its service to compete with TikTok, YouTube shorts and Instagram Reels.

Daniel Chetroni/Shutterstock.com

Disney+ announces vertical video format to compete with TikTok and YouTube Shorts

Disney+ is adding vertical video format to its service, the company announced at a recent Tech + Data Showcase at CES in Las Vegas. Vertical video format is expected to come later this year, and it is one of a number of marketing-focused announcements the company made at the event, Deadline reported. 

“We’ll look to evolve the experience over time,” a Disney notice said of the vertical video plan. 

The aim is to “explore its use in a variety of ways across categories and content types, for a personalized and dynamic feed. That will include expanding across news and entertainment, turning Disney+ into a must-visit daily destination.”

Prior to the event, Erin Teague, EVP of Product Management for Disney Entertainment and ESPN said “everything is on the table” referring to the way vertical video will be implemented on Disney+. 

Teague added that the company is looking into ways to integrate vertical video so that it is already familiar to its users, “So, it won’t be a kind of disjointed, random experience.” 

This suggests that vertical video could include: original short shows, social media clips or short scenes from movies and TV shows. 

Disney first tested the idea on ESPN. 

ESPN vertical video test provided valuable insights 

Testing vertical video with ESPN helped the company gain insight into how users react to it. 

“Vertical videos are really great as daily habits. snackable, short, bite sized experiences,” Teague said adding that the idea is not to tease subscribers for longer-form content but to upgrade overall service. 

Teague also highlighted how she analyzed this trend previously while working for YouTube, when the video giant created YouTube shorts. According to her, many people now watch short videos on their TVs not just on phones. 

She believes that YouTube “took a long time” to respond to the change in viewers habits and that it is of crucial importance to “meet people where they are… This is what Gen Z and Gen Alpha are expecting. They are not necessarily thinking about sitting down, watching a long-form, two-and-a-half hour piece of content on their phones.”

Potential risks of popular short-form video formats

Industry data shows short‑form video formats have substantial viewer engagement, with platforms like YouTube Shorts and TikTok posting higher engagement rates than long‑form content and traditional video formats.

For example, short‑form videos generate about 2.5× more engagement than long‑form video, and videos under 90 seconds retain ~50% of viewers on average, according to analysis by Marketing LTB. 

Related: Major streaming service launches generous deal for new subscribers

However, despite its popularity, short form videos have important disadvantages. 

Despite short-form video content being a relatively new form of digital entertainment, there are already several studies that showcase some its negative effects on viewers abilities. 

According to a study published in Frontiers in Psychology in December 2023, short-form video addiction increases academic procrastination both directly and indirectly.

In a direct way, addiction to these videos leads to more procrastination. However, in an indirect way, addiction to short-form videos impacts students’ control of their attention (attentional control). 

With less attentional control, students are unable to concentrate on their academic tasks.

Even YouTube co-founder Steve Chen told Stanford Business School he wouldn’t want his children watching only short videos on platforms like TikTok, Reels, or Shorts.

Consumers, or viewers, in this context, dictate what streamers must do to remain competitive. Remember that when TikTok launched at a time YouTube was already a king of streaming platforms. Its chance for success depended on offering something different, and it did — short-form video content with a user-friendly interface, allowing for more personal engagement with videos.

Competing companies often copy successful features from rivals, showing a lack of originality.

Let’s take a look at how Disney+ subscribers are welcoming vertical video format announcements. 

More Streaming:

  • Amazon Prime Video introduces major free upgrade for US subscribers
  • HBO Max unveils new way to watch beloved shows
  • CNN makes generous limited-time offer to subscribers
  • Apple TV adds key feature Netflix dropped

How Disney+ subscribers are responding to vertical video format  

The news quickly spread across the social media platforms and subscribers quickly reacted. On this Reddit thread spreading the announcement, the majority of users strongly disliked the idea of vertical videos on Disney+. 

Many subscribers were frustrated with the news, criticizing the move and arguing that the platform should focus on quality content instead of “junk” or “social-media-style” clips. 

“How is this going to increase engagement? Nobody turns on a streaming service wanting to watch vertical videos,” said user movienerd7042. 

Related: Disney World unveils major money-saving offers for 2026

User NowWeGetSerious commented focusing on the lack of quality in short videos, “These vertical shorts and tiktokfication of all media is just ridiculous imo Great for those when short span of memory. Horrible for us who wants good quality stuff.” 

A number of users expressed disappointment and concern that Disney+ is trying to be more like TikTok and YouTubeShorts, and arguing that vertical videos do not belong on a traditional streaming service. 

 “Competing for attention from people that scroll past content with a limited attention span sounds desperate, but maybe that’s where we’re at now, sounds wonderfully disappointing,” commented user vynnski. 

A few users were not as bothered as much, suggesting that the upgrade could serve one good purpose, if they “show clips of trailers to allow people to discover new shows.” 

Bottom line: With recent moves and the latest upgrade, Disney+ is clearly focused on growing its subscription base. However, mimicking competition instead of originality and pivoting from its fundamentals may not be the best way to do that. 

Related: YouTube TV drops another generous deal for new subscribers