Category: iWorld

  • Hunter becomes the heartthrob as Suniel Shetty flips the script on action

    Hunter becomes the heartthrob as Suniel Shetty flips the script on action

    MUMBAI: Who says action heroes can’t make you cry between chase scenes? At Goa Fest 2025, Hunter star Suniel Shetty proved that sometimes the most explosive moves are emotional. In a candid fireside chat with Amazon MX Player director Aruna Daryanani Shetty opened up about reinventing action storytelling, ageing on screen with grace, and why advertisers need to drop the “brand unsafe” tag when it comes to meaningful action.

    “There’s no point in high-octane fights without high-voltage emotion,” said Shetty, speaking of Hunter, where he plays ACP Vikram Sinha, a bruised but burning father determined to reunite with his daughter. He revealed that the show’s soul, family, music, emotion is what made it a pan-generational success.

    “Season 1 was brash,” he said, “but Season 2 is about transformation.”

    The new arc?

    Vikram, believing his daughter is dead, suddenly receives a call: “Papa, get me out of here.” The series then follows his redemption quest across borders and boundaries, less fists, more feelings.

    Shetty’s own return to screen mirrored his character’s struggles. “When I signed Hunter, I’d just recovered from a heart attack. Dad was unwell. Work wasn’t exciting. I felt like I had no market left,” he confessed. But the journey gave him a second wind. “At 38, I thought I was done. Now I’m raising the bar every time I step on set.”

    And action has changed too. “Earlier I’d rehearse 15 times. Now I watch 14 times and hit it once with full conviction,” he smiled.

    Despite Hunter’s popularity, Shetty called out advertisers who label such shows as “brand unsafe”. “You’re kidding me, right?” he asked the crowd. “Hunter isn’t gore. It’s about a father getting his daughter back. It’s emotional, not explosive for the sake of it.”

    When a media professional cited caution around showing violence to children, Shetty countered: “This is about family. Marriage, love, loss, redemption, there’s more to this than punches.”

    In a powerful moment, Shetty turned to the audience and asked: “How many of you binge-watch action series? Family Man, Jack Ryan?” As hands tentatively rose, he fired back: “Then why not back us with ads?”

    He also addressed the industry’s obsession with sanitised content. “Advertisers should take risks on stories that matter. We’re telling stories that move people sometimes with a fist, sometimes with a tear.”

    Having survived multiple career reinventions, Shetty credited his enduring fan base to one simple rule: honesty. “I give 100% to every project whether it’s a Rs 100 crore film or a tight-budget drama.” That effort shows, he believes, in audience reactions. “Once, in Patna, a fan saw me in a theatre and jumped off a balcony to imitate a stunt. That’s the intensity of connection.”

    And what’s his advice to the younger generation of actors? “Respect your craft, your producer, your body. It’s not about taking your shirt off anymore. It’s about staying relevant and real.”

    With Hunter’s new season blending raw emotion, complex storytelling, and age-defying action, Suniel Shetty has truly rewritten the rules not just of genre, but of how stories age, evolve and punch back. And if advertisers are still stuck on “safe” spaces, they might just be missing the biggest hero arc of them all.

  • Flipkart rewrites retail media with speed data and a dash of drama

    Flipkart rewrites retail media with speed data and a dash of drama

    MUMBAI: What do love, Lays and logistics have in common? Flipkart, apparently. At its Goa Fest 2025 masterclass, the e-commerce giant rolled out a full-funnel manifesto for how brands can advertise smarter, sell faster and even deliver anti-love chocolates in 10 minutes flat. Packed with metrics, media strategy, and a sprinkling of Valentine’s wit, the session was a whirlwind tour of how retail media is no longer just about deals but about data, delight and deep hyperlocal targeting.

    At the Flipkart masterclass held at Goa Fest 2025, the brand flipped the script on what e-commerce advertising can do showcasing how its ecosystem is now a robust, intelligent ad-tech playground for everyone from FMCG giants to rural D2C sellers.

    Launched as Flipkart’s quick commerce vertical, Flipkart Minutes is not just delivering tomatoes in 10 minutes, it’s shipping electronics. Over 25–28 per cent of all orders now include phones and gadgets, especially in Tier 2 India, where users increasingly need a “Pogo phone” faster than their Wi-Fi can buffer.

    But the brilliance isn’t just logistical, it’s hyperlocal advertising. Brands can now target delivery guys’ helmets in Koramangala or run a Valentine’s Day campaign only for Bangalore. Flipkart cited Cadbury’s 42 per cent YoY sales growth from a split “pro-love” and “anti-love” campaign using Minutes, a strategy that played both sides of the heart-shaped field.

    Flipkart’s Iris analytics platform empowers advertisers with full-funnel insights. Beyond ROAS (Return on Advertising Spend), brands now get New-to-Brand (NTB) metrics measuring how many fresh eyeballs saw and clicked their products.

    With over 2,000 types of audience signals in play and 80 per cent of advertisers using them, Flipkart is serious about understanding behaviour, not just demographics. Think: not just who’s browsing, but what they previously bought, which pin codes they search from, and what their most-used credit card says about them.

    Perhaps the most disruptive insight? Flipkart is offering a line of ad credit to small and rural advertisers based on past performance. Instead of upfront payments, sellers can now use ad credit and pay back as a percentage of actual sales freeing up crucial cash flows.

    Flipkart’s Brand Self-Serve portal has gone from being a display hub to an intelligent coach. Its Keyword Planner allows precise targeting (e.g. phones under Rs 30,000), while PCS Spotlight brings masthead-style prominence right inside search results.

    Thanks to 6–7 layers of search recommendations, even first-time advertisers can run effective campaigns. Add to that Product Performance Ads and a creative Brand Solutions team, and what you have is not just ads, but entire storytelling experiences optimised for ROAS and reach.

    Flipkart’s anecdotal evidence packs punch. Coke targeted party hours before New Year’s by finding users buying Lays and Chakna—not soda. Cadbury ran two opposing Valentine’s Day campaigns, pro-love for Silk, anti-love for Gems and saw their sales shoot up 42% over last year’s campaign.

    With Big Billion Day on the horizon, Flipkart is focusing on customer loyalty targeting, allowing brands to reach habitual discount-hunters during specific periods.

    Their ambitious roadmap includes pushing retail media as a top-funnel tool too. It’s no longer just a performance play. Retail media is now about brand discovery, contextual engagement, and creative risk-taking without betting the whole national ad budget.

    From smart shopping insights to delivering slow-mo smartphones faster than you can say “Galaxy S24 FE,” Flipkart’s masterclass proved one thing: retail media isn’t just booming, it’s blooming.

  • Amazon MX Player touts content, commerce, and context in India’s free streaming revolution

    Amazon MX Player touts content, commerce, and context in India’s free streaming revolution

    MUMBAI: Amazon MX Player director & head Karan Bedi took centre stage at Goafest 2025 to make a bold case for India’s free streaming economy-and how advertisers must rethink reach in a post-TV world. His keynote, ‘Free Streaming Revolution: Premium Content, Unique Audience Signals & Measurable Outcomes’, laid out a data-backed blueprint for brand success in the age of immersive digital video.

    “Video streaming is the number one activity on smartphones in India”, Bedi said, pointing out it now outranks social media and messaging-even in tier two and tier three cities. Unlike the scattergun attention of UGC platforms, he argued, streaming provides a deeply engaged environment: “When customers are immersed in content, they’re immersed in ads too”.

    Digital video advertising in India, he predicted, will surpass television advertising within the next year. “We’re at the cusp”, Bedi noted, adding that advertisers need to pivot their budgets accordingly.

    At the heart of Amazon MX Player’s pitch were three pillars—differentiated reach, differentiated content, and contextual ad solutions. With 1.4 billion downloads globally and 250 million monthly active users in India, MX Player offers what Bedi called “very large and very relevant reach”. Over 50 per cent of its users fall within the Sec A and Sec B segments, and nearly 17 per cent of its audience is exclusive to the platform—unduplicated by either UGC platforms or rival streamers.

    Importantly, MX Player content remains stable even during large cricketing events—a loyalty metric most platforms can’t match. Bedi credited this to “immersive and relevant storytelling”, backed by data and refined through feedback. The content slate spans drama, romance, dubbed international shows, reality series, and experimental formats like ‘micro-dramas’—bite-sized one to two-minute episodes. More than 100 new shows are planned for 2025, including Rise and Fall, Hunter, and Made in India.

    Bedi made a compelling argument for MX Player’s ability to go beyond impressions and deliver brand impact. Using trillions of Amazon shopping signals, the platform enables hyper-targeted ad segmentation—right down to behavioural personas like “health-conscious young parents”. Such targeting, he claimed, leads to 33 per cent higher ad completion and up to 20 per cent stronger brand metrics.

    Ad formats range from integrated product showcases and immersive branding to story-embedded placements within shows. “We can help you move from awareness to action”, Bedi said, highlighting Amazon’s full-funnel capabilities—advertisers can run awareness campaigns on MX Player and follow up with conversion targeting on Amazon’s shopping app, or vice versa.

    He closed with a rallying cry to marketers: “It’s still day one at Amazon”. With India’s digital video frontier heating up, Bedi’s message was clear—brands that stream smart will sell smarter.

  • Fillipino network Cignal goes Super with OTT service, courtesy Tata Play Binge

    Fillipino network Cignal goes Super with OTT service, courtesy Tata Play Binge

    MUMBAI: Cignal has just hit the play button on a game-changer. The Filipino broadcast giant has officially launched Cignal Super, a slick, all-in-one OTT streaming app powered by Tata Play Binge’s white-label tech—and it’s already turning heads.

    After a successful pilot, Cignal Super is now live and ready to supercharge screen time across the Philippines. The app bundles at least eight popular streaming services—including MAX, Viu, Lionsgate Play, Hallmark+, Curiosity Stream, Fuse+, Pilipinas Live, and Cignal Play—into one seamless platform, under a single subscription, one login, and unified search.

    Users of Cignal Super can dive into over 100 live TV channels via Cignal Play, catch the action with Pilipinas Live sports, explore the world with Curiosity Stream docs, binge on pop culture gems from Fuse+, or unwind with feel-good favourites on Hallmark+.

    Cignal Super offers two wallet-friendly plans:

    – Premium Plus at Php799/month unlocks the full OTT buffet across all partner platforms.
    – Premium at Php499/month serves up a curated mix—ideal for variety seekers on a budget.

    And here’s the kicker: new users can grab an intro offer valid till 31 May, with Premium Plus slashed to Php399/month and Premium down to just Php249/month. Stream more, spend less. 

    Cignal superThis marks the country’s first OTT aggregator of its kind, and it’s all running on Tata Play Binge’s robust cloud infrastructure—a global-grade PaaS (platform-as-a-service) built to scale fast across digital economies. Already making waves in Bangladesh, this Philippine launch cements Tata Play Binge’s place in the OTT aggregation big league.

    Tata Play MD & CEO Harit Nagpal was pleased as punched. “ “The launch of Cignal Super is a proud moment for Tata Play Binge white label solution,” said he. “Our PaaS model is helping leading broadcasters and telecom providers to go digital with speed, efficiency and scale. After a successful partnership in Bangladesh and now with Cignal in the Philippines, it’s exciting to see Indian technology enabling local champions to elevate entertainment experiences in their markets.”

    Cignal president & CEO Jane Jimenez-Basas was equally upbeat: “”Cignal is happy to partner with Tata Play for the launch of Cignal Super, the Philippines’ pioneering streaming aggregator. This collaboration allows Cignal to deliver a world-class entertainment experience to Filipino viewers, at home and on the go. With over 70 million smartphone users in the Philippines, Cignal Super is set to revolutionize how Filipinos enjoy their favorite content,” she said. 

    She added, “This partnership with Tata Play represents a significant step in Cignal’s continuing evolution and reaffirms our commitment to bringing joy, providing the best value, and creating shared experiences for Filipinos everywhere by delivering the content that they love.”

    For Tata Play Binge, this is more than just another rollout. It’s a bold play in its local going global” vision—arming regional partners with future-ready tech to leapfrog into the OTT stratosphere.

  • Ashok Namboodiri joins Revsportz as consulting editor to help supercharge global play

    Ashok Namboodiri joins Revsportz as consulting editor to help supercharge global play

    MUMBAI:  Ashok Namboodiri, who until recently led Zee’s international business, has joined Revsportz Global as consulting editor, the fast-growing sports media company confirmed today.

    The announcement was made by Boria Majumdar, founder &  editor in chief of Revsportz, who called Namboodiri “a very strong intellectual” and a long-time friend. 

    The two had kept in touch since Namboodiri’s tenure leading Zee’s international business from Dubai, and their recent meetings have sparked what Majumdar describes as a “smooth and natural” collaboration.

    Namboodiri’s resume reads like a media executive’s dream deck. From leading P&Ls at Zee Entertainment, Star India, and Raymond’s FMCG arm, to heading beverage verticals at Britannia and Tata PepsiCo JV NourishCo, he’s run the numbers and the narratives. Now, he steps into a more editorial and strategic role—ready to launch his own show, write regularly, and push Revsportz’s global game.

    “Over the next few weeks, you’ll hear a lot more from Ashok,” Majumdar teased, adding that the move signals ambitious international expansion for Revsportz.

    Namboodiri will contribute to the editorial voice, business direction and platform innovation at Revsportz—making it clear that the brand is playing to win, both on home turf and abroad.

    Revsportz just drew a powerful card in the media game. The duel for sports eyeballs is on.

  • Google puts pedal to the metal on AI at I/O 2025

    Google puts pedal to the metal on AI at I/O 2025

    MUMBAI: Forget slow-burn product cycles and hush-hush unveilings. At Google I/O 2025, Google parent Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai made one thing very clear: in the Gemini era, Google isn’t waiting for the stage — it’s shipping on Tuesdays.

    “We’re moving faster than ever,” Pichai told the crowd, revealing a dizzying array of AI-powered updates, model breakthroughs, and bleeding-edge products — all underpinned by Google’s latest powerhouse: Gemini 2.5 Pro. The model has surged 300 Elo points since its first generation and now sweeps the LMArena leaderboard. The driving force? Ironwood, Google’s seventh-gen TPU, serving up a brain-melting 42.5 exaflops per pod.

    The pace of adoption is just as staggering. Over the past year, Pichai explained that:

    * Token usage exploded from 9.7 trillion to 480 trillion a month.

    * More than seven million developers are building with Gemini — up five times.

    * The Gemini app has clocked 400 million monthly users, with a 45 per cent spike among 2.5 Pro users.

    With scale like that, Pichai says, “we’re in a new phase of the AI platform shift — turning decades of research into daily reality.”

    Say hello to Google Beam — the spiritual sequel to Project Starline. The new AI-first video chat platform uses six cameras, advanced head-tracking and 3D lightfield displays to create a shockingly lifelike experience. In short: Zoom calls, eat your heart out. With HP on board, Beam hardware hits early testers later this year.

    Also in the mix: real-time speech translation for Google Meet, matching tone, voice and facial expressions. English and Spanish are live in beta now; more tongues to come.

    Google’s AI assistant ambitions are now tangible. Agent Mode, based on Project Mariner, is headed to the Gemini app. Think digital butler with brains: it browses listings, tweaks filters, and can even schedule a house tour — all while chatting like a pro.

    Sundar Pichai

    Expect agents to be everywhere soon: Search, Chrome, Workspace — even chatting with each other using the new Agent2Agent protocol. Google also confirmed Gemini API and SDK support for Anthropic’s Model Context Protocol.

    On the personalisation front, Smart Replies in Gmail are getting a glow-up. With permission, Gemini will mine your emails and files to craft eerily you-like responses, complete with tone and pet phrases. Yes, your AI is about to start writing better emails than you.

    AI is now baked right into Google Search. The newly announced AI Mode allows for longer, more complex queries and natural follow-ups — already available in the US. With Gemini 2.5 Pro now powering it, Search just got a serious IQ boost. AI Overviews are already live in 200 countries and growing fast, especially in the US and India., revealed Pichai. 

    Developers, meet your new best friend: Gemini 2.5 Flash, a lightning-fast, low-cost version built for speed and scale. But the headline act is Deep Think, a new reasoning mode for Pro users that layers in parallel thinking and long-context analysis. Consider it AI with a PhD.

    Creatives, your time has come. Google dropped Veo 3, its most advanced video model yet — now with native audio generation. It also rolled out Imagen 4 for image generation, and Flow, a slick tool for building cinematic clips on the fly.

    Throw in Canvas integration, support for quizzes, infographics and multilingual podcasts, and the Gemini app is shaping up to be a Swiss Army knife for creators.

    Pichai closed with a personal anecdote: a Waymo ride in San Francisco with his 80-something father. “He was amazed,” Pichai said. “It reminded me just how powerful technology can be — not just to dazzle, but to bring people along.”

    The message was clear: AI at Google is no longer a moonshot — it’s now a movement.

  • YouTube eyes the big screen as 38 per cent tune in for TV and film

    YouTube eyes the big screen as 38 per cent tune in for TV and film

    MUMBAI: YouTube’s not just for prank videos and pet fails anymore. That was a point made by YouTube global head Neale Mohan earlier this year when he talked about the platform being watched  more on TVs in the US than on handsets.  Now, this has been confirmed by the latest  consumer research from  Ampere Analysis. The only difference it is beginning to spread globally.  

    Nearly four in ten (38 per cent) of the platform’s global monthly users watch traditional TV shows, films and documentaries. The shift signals YouTube’s growing ambitions beyond the smartphone screen—right into the living room.

    Once the digital playground of vlogs and viral clips, YouTube is fast becoming a home for full-length content from major studios and broadcasters. And it’s not just padding out the platform—TV and film content now ranks among YouTube’s top five most-watched genres. Documentaries alone are pulling in 24 per cent of users each month, while 23 per cent are turning up for shows and movies.

    What’s interesting is how distinct the audiences are: only 22 per cent of viewers watch both. The rest are split between docu-devotees (41 per cent) and drama-only fans (37 per cent). And while the appeal spans age groups, there’s a slight tilt towards 35–44-year-olds and family households.

    The trend is strongest in Asia Pacific (45 per cent) and Latin America (40 per cent), but less so in Western Europe (28 per cent). North America sits bang on the global average at 37 per cent.

    Ampere analysis

    The rise of smart TVs is a game changer here. While smartphones still dominate (used by 77 per cent of long-form viewers), a hefty 34 per cent of those watching both docs and dramas are doing so on smart TVs—compared to just 22 per cent of all YouTube users.

    Ampere, senior research manager Daniel Monaghan sums it up: “YouTube has come a long way from meme montages and low-res vlogs. We’re now seeing serious, studio-backed content that’s pulling in eyeballs. Sure, there’s a risk of cannibalising traditional platforms—but the ad-share potential and massive reach make it a no-brainer.”

    Whether YouTube counts as TV may still be up for debate. But with your gran and your sis now watching documentaries on it from their smart TVs, it might just be time to drop the “user-generated” label.

  • Level up: Banijay Asia and Nodwin Gaming partner  to power up India’s youthverse

    Level up: Banijay Asia and Nodwin Gaming partner to power up India’s youthverse

    MUMBAI: In a match made in gamer heaven, Banijay Asia and Nodwin Gaming have teamed up to turbocharge India’s youth entertainment and gaming landscape. The two powerhouses have inked a strategic partnership that will see Banijay Asia take the reins of Playground — Nodwin’s flagship gaming reality show — and co-create a slew of fresh, disruptive content across gaming, esports, and influencer-led formats.

    With gaming now a full-blown lifestyle, this collaboration aims to tap into India’s ever-evolving Gen Z mindspace by fusing Banijay’s storytelling muscle with Nodwin’s pulse on the gaming community. And they’re not stopping at one franchise — the duo plans to unleash an entire ecosystem of new scripted and reality IPs.

    “This collaboration with Nodwin Gaming is an exciting extension of our vision to create content that resonates with evolving youth audiences. Gaming is not just a sport; it’s a culture, a lifestyle, and a massive content opportunity. With Playground and our upcoming IPs, we aim to redefine engagement and storytelling in this space. I look forward to the creative collaboration with Akshat Rathee, and Joost Roset who we previously worked with, in bringing iconic global IPs to India. This is an invaluable opportunity to create clutter-breaking formats in the youth and gaming space,” said Banijay Asia & Endemol Shine India founder & group CEO Deepak Dhar. 

    Nodwin Gaming co-founder & managing director Akshat Rathee added, “”Youth entertainment is evolving rapidly, and our partnership with Banijay Asia positions us perfectly to lead that change. With Playground, we’ve just begun to explore what’s possible. Backed by Banijay’s global expertise, we’re now set to scale the IP across multiple languages and markets, with the ambition of building an international format. At the heart of our approach is our philosophy of ‘timeshare of mindshare.’ We’re not just creating content, we’re creating cultural moments. This is just the beginning of a bold new chapter in gaming and youth content.”

    The Rusk Media creative team — original minds behind Playground — will stay involved as the format evolves from a single show into an annual line-up of five to 10 marquee IPs. Expect more drama, more battles, and more screen time as the series expands.

    Backed by its success with Comic Con India, BGMI Masters Series, and NH7 Weekender, Nodwin Gaming is already a big player in the youth space. Now with Banijay — whose global playbook includes brands like MasterChef, Peaky Blinders, and Black Mirror — the stage is set for a full-blown format revolution in Indian gaming content.

    From stream to scream, it’s into the playground for the two. At least for now!

    (Deepak Dhar – left – and Akshat Rathee -right- pictured above. source: Banijay Asia)

  • Netflix and Supercell partner for Clash of Clans animated series

    Netflix and Supercell partner for Clash of Clans animated series

    MUMBAI: Netflix is about to turn your village raid into a full-blown series binge. The streamer has teamed up with mobile gaming giant Supercell to bring Clash, an animated series based on the runaway hits Clash of Clans and Clash Royale. No, this isn’t a drill—nor is it a poorly-timed Hog Rider charge.

    Currently in pre-production, Clash will be helmed by Fletcher Moules, the wizard behind Supercell’s viral YouTube shorts. With Moules as showrunner and Ron Weiner (of Silicon Valley, 30 Rock and Futurama fame) penning the scripts, the show promises a blend of explosive action, tongue-in-cheek humour, and yes—immaculate Barbarian moustaches. Vancouver-based Icon Creative Studio is handling animation duties.

    The storyline? Classic underdog chaos. A plucky but clueless barbarian finds himself forced to rally a band of misfits—wizards, archers, and goblins galore—to protect their village while navigating the hilariously absurd politics of war.

    Supercell  head of film & TV Curtis Lelash said: “We’re thrilled to be working with Netflix and this creative team to bring the world of Clash to life. Think epic battles, immaculate Barbarian mustaches, and the kind of humor our players know and love. They’ve been asking for a Clash series forever, and we’re beyond excited to finally say: it’s happening!”

    Netflix’s veep of animation series John Derderian added: “Clash has been a global gaming phenomenon for over a decade—filled with humor, action and unforgettable characters perfect for an animated series adaptation. Working with the incredible team at Supercell, Fletcher Moules and Ron Weiner, we’re bringing all the fun, chaos and spirit of the world of Clash to life in a whole new way. We can’t wait for fans—old and new—to experience the mayhem.”

    With over four billion downloads and 180 billion hours of gameplay under its belt, the Clash universe isn’t just mobile—it’s momentous. Netflix has a track record of turning fan favourites into cult classics (Arcane, Blue Eye Samurai, Sonic Prime), and this latest drop could well be its next tower-toppler.

    No release date yet, but fans are already hoarding hype like Dark Elixir. One thing’s for sure: mobile mayhem just levelled up.

  • Nazara’s Fusebox drops Big Brother bombshell in mobile gaming world

    Nazara’s Fusebox drops Big Brother bombshell in mobile gaming world

    MUMBAI:  India’s Nazara Technologies has tossed a juicy twist into the global gaming arena. Its UK-based subsidiary, Fusebox Games, has teamed up with Banijay Rights to launch Big Brother: The Game, bringing the drama, deceit and diary room straight to your smartphone.

    This mobile game isn’t just another tap-and-swipe time-killer. It’s a choose-your-own-chaos simulator where players enter the infamous Big Brother house, craft their own characters, form alliances, win challenges — and yes, face the agony of eviction. Think Love Island meets Survivor meets screen-time addiction.

    Fusebox CEO Terry Lee said: “We’re incredibly excited to bring Big Brother: The Game to players around the
    world. This is more than just a mobile game — it’s a reality show experience where players shape the drama, form alliances, and fight for survival in the Big Brother house. The global appeal of the Big Brother franchise, combined with our interactive storytelling expertise, makes this a truly unique release.”

    Nazara CEO Nitish Mittersain added: “Fusebox Games has demonstrated exceptional creativity and innovation in bringing popular IPs to the interactive gaming space. The launch of Big Brother: The Game aligns with our vision to expand globally and deliver engaging content that resonates with diverse audiences. We are proud to support Fusebox in this exciting endeavor. “

    For Banijay, it’s yet another digital reboot of a format that’s still raking in eyeballs after 600 series across 70 countries.

    Big Brother has captured the hearts of millions of viewers worldwide. Our partnership with Fusebox Games opens exciting new possibilities, creating immersive ways for fans to engage with this iconic brand. We look forward to seeing players around the world experience the drama, strategy, and excitement of the Big Brother house in a whole new way,”  said Banijay Rights svp of gaming Mark Woollard. 

    Available on iOS and Android, the game builds on Fusebox’s hit-making streak, which includes the Love Island game that previously ruled the app charts. With custom narratives and dynamic characters, Big Brother: The Game is designed to stir drama across demographics.

    One of the world’s most iconic and successful reality television franchises, Big Brother first hit screens 25 years ago in the Netherlands in 1999. Since its debut, over 600 series of the show have aired around the world in 70 markets. Globally, the format has maintained huge popularity and is one of Banijay Entertainment’s top three formats, airing in 28 territories last year. The format continues to make a splash globally, with prime-time success in the UK, Spain and Brazil, long-running versions airing consistently in the US and Italy since 2000, six regional versions each year in India, and a new adaptation in Malta. Big Brother is a Banijay Entertainment format.

    For Nazara, which acquired Fusebox in 2024, it’s one more power play in a global gaming push that’s anything but subtle. The message is clear: if the world’s watching, Nazara’s building.