Category: iWorld

  • Jabali.ai levels up with AI game studio launch

    Jabali.ai levels up with AI game studio launch

    MUMBAI: Move over, joysticks,  it’s time for genius sticks. Jabali.ai has rolled out Jabali Studio, a groundbreaking AI-powered platform that turns anyone with a spark of imagination into a game creator. Whether you fancy yourself the next Hideo Kojima or just want to dabble in digital storytelling, this platform promises to make game creation as easy as playing one.

    Launched on 29 October 2025 in Mumbai, Jabali Studio blends art and algorithm, allowing users to design, build, and publish 2D and 3D games without wrestling with lines of code. The platform’s mission? To make game-making a playground for everyone, from pro developers to first-time creators.

    Built around the belief that “everyone can be a game maker,” Jabali Studio offers two creative routes: vibe code for those who like to think in logic and mechanics, and design mode for the visually driven storytellers. What’s more, it plays nice with leading AI systems like Openai, Gemini, Claude, and Grok: meaning creators can collaborate with their favourite digital co-pilot.

    “Game creation has long been limited by the complexity of tools and the need for large technical teams,” said Jabali.ai founder and CEO Vatsal Bhardwaj. “Jabali Studio changes that by combining AI, creativity, and accessibility in one environment. This is a step towards a future where game development is open, intuitive, and limitless.”

    The platform also boasts smart features such as self-healing projects that fix broken builds automatically, AI-powered debugging, and intelligent publishing to Jabali.ai. Users can even choose how hands-on they want their AI assistant to be, with modes like Autonomous, Collaborative, Cautious, or Creative.

    Compatible with engines like Godot and Phaser (and soon Unity and Unreal), Jabali Studio gives creators complete source code access, ensuring they maintain ownership while learning and experimenting freely.

    Backed by 5 million dollars in seed funding from Bitkraft Ventures, Sapphire Ventures, and the Sony Innovation Fund, Jabali.ai is staking its claim as a global pioneer in AI-driven game creation.

  • JioSaavn bets big on design with Pro makeover

    JioSaavn bets big on design with Pro makeover

    MUMBAI: JioSaavn is giving its 100 million monthly active users a visual overhaul, but the real treats are reserved for those willing to pay. The audio streaming platform today rolled out version 10.0, a comprehensive redesign that polishes the experience for everyone whilst dangling a premium aesthetic carrot exclusively for JioSaavn Pro subscribers.

    The update, launched on 29 October, touches everything from buttons to typography to colour palettes. But Pro subscribers get an altogether posher experience: refined textures, subtle animations, dynamic visuals that adapt to album artwork, and a darker background that makes cover art pop. There’s even an animated leaf effect—a “signature Pro visual element”—fluttering across select pages.

    The redesign isn’t mere cosmetic fiddling. JioSaavn has reengineered core interface elements—buttons, tab pills, pop-up flows—to follow a coherent design language that adapts seamlessly across themes. Iconography has been sharpened: Play, Skip, Home, Share, Edit and the ellipsis menu all sport a more contemporary aesthetic. Typography has been fine-tuned for improved legibility against updated background colours.

    The Pro-exclusive theme introduces a distinguished app icon and reimagined animation that sets the tone before users even tap in. Pro badging appears consistently across profile and settings pages, reinforcing the premium tier at every turn. The player interface now dynamically shifts to match whatever track is playing—a neat trick that makes the experience feel alive.

    Founded in 2007, JioSaavn has grown into India’s dominant audio streaming service, offering over 100 million tracks in 15-plus languages across podcasts and music. The platform spans Android, iOS, JioPhones and web, with interfaces available in twelve display languages.

    JioSaavn Pro strips out ads entirely and throws in unlimited downloads, unlimited skips, endless autoplay and superior audio quality. Subscription options include individual, family, duo and student plans. Jio users get a bonus: they can set any of 2 million-plus songs as their JioTune caller tune.

    The version 10.0 update is available now on Android and iOS. JioSaavn is sweetening the deal with festive offers to lure free-tier listeners into trying Pro.

    The strategy is transparent: make the free experience better, but make the paid experience irresistible. By merging functionality with design excellence—and reserving the most elegant flourishes for subscribers—JioSaavn is betting that 100 million monthly listeners will notice the difference. And that at least some of them will open their wallets to close the gap between good and gorgeous.

  • Diljit’s got the right Aura as fans inspire his global groove

    Diljit’s got the right Aura as fans inspire his global groove

    MUMBAI: When Diljit Dosanjh talks music, even silence feels like a rhythm waiting to drop. In a candid and characteristically cheeky chat on Gal Baat with Spotify, the global Punjabi superstar revealed that his latest album and world tour Aura owes its name to his fans. “They’d say they felt a special energy at my shows, that’s how Aura happened,” he smiled.

    Dosanjh, who’s been effortlessly blending bhangra beats with pop swagger across continents, spoke about how India’s soundscape is a musical buffet. “Indian music is so diverse,” he said, “but Punjabi music… it just dominates the world.” The statement, delivered with his signature grin, was less brag and more truth considering his sold-out arenas from Vancouver to Wembley.

    Amid all the spotlight and studio sessions, the Lover hitmaker admitted that his creative fuel often comes from quieter, humbler places. “I don’t get much time in my schedule, so whenever I find an escape, I go to this park where people sing free music and sometimes I just join them,” he shared. It’s a glimpse of the artist beyond the stage lights, someone who finds melody in the everyday.

    Reflecting on the roots that anchor his global fame, Diljit also paid tribute to Punjab’s musical legends. “Chamkila’s beats stay unmatched,” he said, nodding to the folk icon whose raw storytelling continues to echo through contemporary soundscapes.

    Through his easy humour and grounded wisdom, Diljit offered more than just anecdotes, he gave fans a peek into the soul of an artist who’s rewriting what it means to be desi and global at once. From farm fields to festival stages, his Aura clearly resonates far beyond language or borders.

    Watch the full Gal Baat on Spotify.
     

  • Whatsapp message boom rings alarm bells for mobile operators

    Whatsapp message boom rings alarm bells for mobile operators

    MUMBAI: Looks like Whatsapp is about to have the last word quite literally. A new study by Juniper Research predicts that over-the-top (OTT) business messaging will leap from 390 billion messages in 2025 to more than 560 billion by 2027, powered by WhatsApp’s cutthroat pricing play.

    Juniper’s latest A2P & Business Messaging Market 2025–2030 report finds that Whatsapp’s authentication rates 50 to 90 per cent lower than traditional A2P SMS one-time passcodes are helping it corner a sizeable slice of the enterprise communication pie. With prices this low, businesses are flocking to Whatsapp for their verification and alert needs, edging telecom operators out of the conversation.

    “By first securing authentication traffic, Whatsapp is laying the groundwork to move into higher-value business messaging,” said Juniper Research senior research analyst Molly Gatford. “Once enterprises are onboarded for authentication, WhatsApp must upsell to marketing use cases, where termination fees are far higher and the real revenue opportunity lies.”

    That’s not good news for mobile network operators, who are already losing ground in the lucrative business messaging arena. Juniper Research warns that if operators don’t adapt, OTT platforms could completely dominate enterprise communication in just a few years.

    The report suggests that to keep up, operators must rethink their pricing strategy moving from flat SMS rates to use case-based pricing across SMS and RCS (Rich Communication Services). This, analysts say, will help enterprises understand the added value of RCS and prevent further migration to OTT channels.

    To pull this off, telcos will need to partner with technology providers capable of using AI-driven tools and behavioural analysis to classify messages by use case at scale ensuring fair and accurate billing. “By adopting a use case-based pricing strategy that is consistent across SMS and RCS, operators will enable enterprises to better assess RCS’s added value over SMS,” Gatford explained.

    Juniper’s new market suite offers one of the most detailed assessments yet of the A2P and business messaging landscape, with over 146,000 datapoints across 61 countries. And the big takeaway? The future of business messaging may not be in your inbox, it’s already in your Whatsapp chats.

     

  • Munawar’s back in action with First Copy S2

    Munawar’s back in action with First Copy S2

    MUMBAI: He’s back to steal the spotlight, and maybe a few hearts along the way. Munawar Faruqui returns as Arif in the high-octane teaser for First Copy Season 2, unveiled by Amazon MX Player. The much-loved crime thriller that took audiences deep into Mumbai’s 90s film piracy underworld is revving up for a darker, more dangerous comeback.

    The teaser hints at Arif’s turbulent return, a man once on top of the game, now haunted by the ghosts of his past. As ambition clashes with betrayal, old alliances crumble and new enemies emerge, leaving viewers with one burning question, can Arif reclaim his empire, or will his empire consume him?

    Alongside Munawar, the ensemble cast features Krystle D’Souza, Gulshan Grover, Saqib Ayub, Ashi Singh, Meiyang Chang, Inam Ul Haq, Raza Murad and newcomer Nawab Shah. The trailer is set to drop on 29 October, setting the stage for the show’s grand return.

    Following its breakout first season, First Copy has cemented itself as one of India’s most-watched crime dramas. Season 2 will soon stream for free across Amazon MX Player, the MX Player app, Prime Video, Fire TV and Airtel Xstream, ensuring fans can dive back into Arif’s world wherever they are.

    With its gritty storyline, sharp writing and star-studded cast, First Copy Season 2 looks set to reclaim its throne as the kingpin of India’s streaming thrillers.

     

  • McCartney hits the right note with Man on the Run

    McCartney hits the right note with Man on the Run

    MUMBAI:  He may have left The Beatles behind, but Paul McCartney never missed a beat. Man on the Run, a new documentary streaming globally on Prime Video from 25 February, takes audiences on a front-row journey through McCartney’s life after the world’s most famous band split up.

    Directed by Academy Award-winner Morgan Neville, the film charts McCartney’s creative rebirth alongside his wife Linda, as the two form Wings and redefine what it means to start again under the glare of fame. Packed with never-before-seen footage and rare archival treasures, the documentary offers an intimate glimpse at the man behind the music, facing both artistic challenges and personal triumphs.

    Produced by Tremolo in association with MPL and Polygram Entertainment, Man on the Run will first hit select cinemas before landing on Prime Video in more than 240 countries and territories.

    But that’s not all, the film headlines a larger partnership between McCartney, Universal Music Group, and Amazon, set to roll out over the coming year. Fans can look forward to exclusive music releases, limited-edition merchandise drops, and even McCartney’s own commentary on Amazon Music.

    The collaboration also coincides with the November release of Wings: The Story of a Band on the Run, his companion book, and Wings, a self-titled definitive music collection arriving on vinyl and streaming platforms. Add to that his upcoming Got Back tour across North America, and it’s clear Sir Paul’s still flying high.

     

  • Bite-sized drama is eating the internet: Ampere Analysis

    Bite-sized drama is eating the internet: Ampere Analysis

    MUMBAI: The attention span may be shrinking, but the audience for micro-drama is exploding. More than one in ten internet users worldwide now regularly watch drama episodes lasting ten minutes or less on social media—a format that’s turning Hollywood’s traditional playbook on its head and forcing commissioners to rethink everything from episode length to distribution strategy.

    Ampere Analysis surveyed over 100,000 consumers in two separate waves across 30 global markets, polling 56,000 internet users aged 18–64. The findings reveal that these “mini-dramas” and “micro-dramas”—the shortest clocking in at under two minutes—are thriving on YouTube and TikTok. The platforms have become both primary distribution channels and discovery engines for premium subscription apps like DramaBox and ReelShorts, which are betting big on vertical video optimised for phone viewing.

    The numbers tell a compelling story about changing consumption habits. Average internet users now spend nearly 50 minutes a day watching videos on social media. For younger audiences, that figure jumps dramatically: 18- to 34-year-olds are clocking over an hour daily, creating a captive audience for bite-sized content that fits neatly between scrolls.

    The demographic split is predictable but stark. Viewers aged 18–34 are 21 per cent more likely than average to have watched a mini-drama in the past month. Nearly half of internet users in that age bracket—46 per cent—are already hooked, consuming short-form scripted content as readily as they consume traditional social media posts.

    But the format isn’t exclusively a young person’s game. Among 35- to 44-year-olds, 23 per cent have watched a micro-drama in the past month—the highest proportion of any age group surveyed. Some 19 per cent of 18- to 24-year-olds reported the same, with the 45-to-54 cohort close behind at 18 per cent. Even the 55-to-64 demographic is getting involved, with 13 per cent tuning in. The data suggests mini-dramas are breaking out of their youth-oriented niche and moving into the mainstream.

    AGE OF VIEWERS

    Geography tells an equally revealing story. Engagement is strongest in Thailand, Malaysia and the Philippines, where mobile-first viewing habits dominate and vertical video has become the default mode of content consumption. The Asia-Pacific region leads consumption overall—hardly surprising given that nearly all existing micro-drama platforms hail from China, where the format has already matured into a lucrative industry. The market is soon to be flooded with Western competitors trying to replicate that success. European audiences, by contrast, remain largely unmoved by the format, suggesting cultural preferences or viewing habits that haven’t yet shifted to accommodate ultra-short storytelling.

    YouTube commands 44 per cent of mini-drama viewership, with TikTok capturing 38 per cent. Together, the two platforms account for a commanding 82 per cent of all short-form drama consumption on social media—Instagram picks up the scraps. YouTube’s sheer scale gives it the edge: in September, it accounted for 12.6 per cent of all television usage, according to Nielsen, compared with Netflix’s 8.3 per cent. No other service claimed even five per cent. While vertical video may feel like TikTok’s natural domain, YouTube’s reach makes it nearly impossible to overcome.

    Romance, anime and fantasy are the genres pulling the biggest crowds—commissioners would be wise to treat these as priority areas for future productions. The preference for escapist, emotionally-driven content suggests audiences are using mini-dramas for quick hits of entertainment rather than deep narrative engagement.
    Minal Modha, research director and head of sports media, sponsorship and consumer research at Ampere Analysis, says shorter scripted drama platforms are “capitalising on the increasing use of vertical videos customised for phone viewing, particularly among younger audiences”. The format’s success, she notes, stems from its perfect alignment with existing social media behaviour patterns.

    The industry is pursuing two distinct strategies, both designed to maximise the format’s commercial potential. The first: dump entire series on YouTube and monetise through advertising revenue, treating the platform like traditional broadcast television but with shorter episodes and higher frequency. The second: seed clips and teasers on TikTok or Instagram to build buzz and audience interest, then drive viewers into subscription apps such as DramaBox or ReelShorts for the full experience. It’s a funnel approach that transforms social platforms into massive marketing engines.

    The format may be miniature, but the business model is anything but. Short attention spans, it turns out, can generate long revenue streams—and potentially more reliable ones than traditional hour-long dramas. Production costs are lower, turnaround times are faster, and audiences can consume entire story arcs in a single lunch break. As Hollywood scrambles to jump into mini-drama production, the question is no longer whether bite-sized content works—it’s who can scale it fastest, and whether Western producers can crack the code that’s already minting money in Asia.

  • Bhavesh Dalmia switches from pharma to power as Torrent Electricals’ new marketing chief

    Bhavesh Dalmia switches from pharma to power as Torrent Electricals’ new marketing chief

    MUMBAI: Bhavesh Dalmia has traded pills for plugs. The marketing veteran, who spent over six years steering consumer campaigns at Cipla, has joined Torrent Electricals as general manager for marketing this month.
    It marks a sharp pivot from the Bay of Bengal to what Dalmia calls “the rich Amethyst”—a poetic nod to Torrent’s signature purple branding. More practically, it’s a move from pharma marketing to the industrial heft of the Torrent Group’s electrical manufacturing arm.

    Dalmia brings two decades of brand-building chops across consumer health, fast-moving consumer goods and financial services. At Cipla, where he served as associate director for consumer marketing from September 2019, he championed digital transformation and omnichannel strategies. His portfolio includes campaigns such as #BerokZindagi, #SaridonMovieReview and #Fairsexfairsay—efforts that blended social media punch with traditional media muscle.

    Before Cipla, he spent over eight years at Piramal Enterprises as senior brand manager for consumer products, and five years at Madison World handling the Godrej account. His CV also includes a stint at Delhi Press Group.
    At Torrent Electricals, Dalmia says he’ll focus on building brand presence and driving growth through “impactful marketing strategies”. Whether that means bringing his pharma playbook to circuit breakers and switchgear remains to be seen. But if his track record is any guide, expect data-driven campaigns and plenty of hashtags.

  • Studio Blo gets its Hollywood script with Chad Greulach in the frame

    Studio Blo gets its Hollywood script with Chad Greulach in the frame

    MUMBAI: Lights, camera… algorithm! India’s Studio Blo, the country’s pioneering AI film studio, is ready to roll on its biggest project yet, a Hollywood partnership with veteran producer Chad Greulach, whose credits stretch across Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime and Discovery.

    Greulach’s cinematic résumé is no small scroll, he’s worked with names that light up marquees and arenas alike: Leonardo DiCaprio, Snoop Dogg, John Legend, Lenny Kravitz, Gene Simmons and Criss Angel, to name a few. Now, he’s stepping into the world of AI storytelling with Studio Blo to craft original entertainment IPs for the American market where human creativity meets machine precision.

    The partnership will see the duo co-develop AI-powered stories and content for studios, music labels, channels and brands, while also expanding Faimous, Studio Blo’s AI-led celebrity IP engine into Hollywood. The move aims to merge AI’s creative horsepower with star-driven storytelling, opening new frontiers in how celebrity and content intersect.

    For Studio Blo, the announcement marks another bold step in a journey that’s already caught global attention. Its current slate includes “Warlord”, an AI-generated TV series co-produced with acclaimed filmmaker Shekhar Kapur, which explores the emotional and philosophical edges of AI and human imagination.

    “Our collaboration with Chad marks a defining moment in our journey where India will make stories for the world,” said Studio Blo co-founder and CEO Dipankar Mukherjee. “We’re using our proprietary AI tech stack as a creative collaborator with the finest global talent. Chad’s expertise will help us craft AI-first stories that are emotionally rich, visually stunning and globally resonant.”

    Greulach, for his part, sees the partnership as the future in motion. “The future of entertainment lies at the crossroads of technology and creativity, and Studio Blo is right at that intersection,” he said. “Dipankar and his team aren’t just experimenting, they’re reimagining storytelling itself. Together, we’ll build entertainment IPs that fuse human artistry with machine intelligence to captivate audiences everywhere.”

    As AI reshapes every frame of the creative process from script to screen Studio Blo is positioning itself as India’s breakout player in the global AI entertainment ecosystem, proving that the next big Hollywood story might just be coded in India.

    With this alliance, Studio Blo isn’t just crossing continents, it’s blurring the line between imagination and innovation, showing that in the world of film, even intelligence can be artificial but emotion never is.
     

  • Anime meets game as Crunchyroll and HoYoverse level up together

    Anime meets game as Crunchyroll and HoYoverse level up together

    MUMBAI: It’s the ultimate crossover episode where watching and playing collide. Crunchyroll and HoYoverse are joining forces for a special global collaboration that promises to blur the line between anime marathons and gaming marathons. From 6 November 2025 to 27 January 2026, Honkai: Star Rail players will not only get in-game rewards but also a taste of Crunchyroll premium for free.

    When the event page goes live on 6 November, eligible players of Honkai: Star Rail can snag a 14-day Crunchyroll Mega Fan free trial by linking their game and streaming accounts. But that’s not all, the anime world gets its own treat with the premiere of “Chimerric Park,” a special edition of HoYoFair 2025’s fan art series, streaming exclusively on Crunchyroll for two weeks.

    By watching Chimerric Park and completing missions, fans can earn Honkai: Star Rail goodies including Stellar Jades, Lost Crystals, and other cosmic treasures. The campaign rolls out in four waves, keeping players hooked across the festive months:

    .  Round 1: 6 Nov 2025 (6 PM PT) – 25 Nov 2025 (5:59 pm PT)

    .  Round 2: 25 Nov 2025 (6 PM PT) – 16 Dec 2025 (5:59 pm PT)

    . Round 3: 16 Dec 2025 (6 PM PT) – 6 Jan 2026 (5:59 pm PT)

    .  Round 4: 6 Jan 2026 (6 PM PT) – 27 Jan 2026 (5:59 pm PT)

    Crunchyroll executive vice president of emerging business Terry Li explained why the partnership feels almost inevitable: “We know that nearly 80% of anime fans play anime or anime-related games, and 40% of our audience are spending more than 20 hours a week on games like Honkai: Star Rail. Delivering in-game rewards to Crunchyroll Members is our way of enhancing their gaming experiences and creating compelling moments to jump into titles that speak to our fans.”

    For HoYoverse, the collaboration also celebrates the fans who turn Honkai: Star Rail into a cultural phenomenon. “Chimerric Park” brings together global artists who’ve transformed their passion for the game into dazzling visuals, now premiering alongside the world’s most beloved anime on Crunchyroll.

    The partnership neatly coincides with the launch of Version 3.7 – “As Tomorrow Became Yesterday”, which introduces a slate of fresh content and the much-awaited five-star character Cyrene (Remembrance). Players diving into the event can collect up to 120 Stellar Jades and more through limited-time quests.

    From premium streaming perks to in-game riches, this Crunchyroll x HoYoverse tie-up is more than a marketing move, it’s a love letter to fandom itself. So whether you’re grinding levels or bingeing arcs, this winter’s crossover gives you plenty of reason to hit “play.”