Is Bollywood Blockbusters free to play?
Yes. The Bollywood pack is free to play in the browser. No signup, no download — just open the link and start.
Bollywood Fans
Dialogues, songs, debuts, comebacks — play the Bollywood Blockbusters pack and settle who in the group actually knows their cinema.
Play it first
Jump straight in. AI-hosted, no signup, shareable score at the end.
Built For
Bollywood fans, Hindi cinema enthusiasts, WhatsApp group hosts, film-night communities
What You Get
Suggested starter topic: Bollywood blockbusters trivia across decades of Hindi cinema
About This Pack
The Bollywood Blockbusters pack is built for fans who can sing the first antara of "Tujhe Dekha To" from memory, argue about whether peak Shah Rukh Khan in the 90s was better than peak Amitabh Bachchan in the 70s, and spot which Karan Johar film a single frame is from. It's not a casual-viewer quiz — it's a fan test, hosted start to finish by Raj, Trivana's Desi-energy AI voice. Raj reads each question, reacts to your answer in real time, and carries the warmth of a film-obsessed cousin running the round, not the cold energy of a corporate quiz engine. The pack is tuned for fans who've actually sat through the three-hour cuts — not the person who's only watched the Netflix highlights reel or the YouTube trailer compilation. Losing still lands well because Raj makes the burn feel affectionate, the way the group chat would. Winning lands even better, because the share card makes sure everyone in the chat sees your score.
Questions span six decades of Hindi cinema, because real fans argue across eras. The 70s angry-young-man Bachchan and Zeenat Aman counterculture, the 80s Mithun / Anil Kapoor / Madhuri Dixit run, the 90s diaspora-romance era that made the Khans — Shah Rukh, Salman, Aamir — the Big 3 and handed DDLJ, HAHK, and Kuch Kuch Hota Hai to the canon. The 2000s brought Karan Johar's family dramas, Bhansali's scale, and the Bachchan dynasty handoff from Amitabh to Abhishek. The 2010s reopened the Kapoor line through Ranbir, elevated Deepika and Alia, and pulled genre cinema out of the margins with Zoya Akhtar and Anurag Kashyap. The 2020s pack streaming debuts, pan-India crossover moments, and the post-pandemic blockbuster rebound of Pathaan, Jawan, and Animal. Expect iconic dialogues ("Mere paas Maa hai," "Don ko pakadna," "Kitne aadmi the"), iconic songs across R.D. Burman, Laxmikant-Pyarelal, A.R. Rahman, and Pritam, and debut-versus-comeback trivia that rewards fans who've tracked careers, not just hit singles.
Bollywood fandom lives in WhatsApp groups — family chats, college friend circles, diaspora groups spread across cities and continents — and this pack is built for that exact loop. No room code, no lobby, no signup. Somebody in the family group plays on their phone in 3-4 minutes, the score card drops into the chat with a rich preview, and suddenly the uncle who claimed to have seen every Yash Chopra film has to prove it. The share card previews natively in WhatsApp, iMessage, and Telegram, so the link doesn't get stripped to a naked URL — it lands with pack title, emoji, and the score you're daring people to beat. This is the distribution wedge: Bollywood fans don't rally on Discord, they rally in WhatsApp, and a one-tap mobile game with a shareable score card is how those groups actually run a challenge. Film-night pregames, long-weekend family gatherings, Diwali and Eid get-togethers — the pack fits rituals that already exist.
Beyond the Blockbusters pack, you can build a custom Bollywood game in about 30 seconds. Pick the angle — "only SRK films from the 90s," "Bhansali's entire filmography," "every Big 3 debut and breakout moment," "songs by R.D. Burman only," "Karan Johar family trees," "the Kapoor dynasty from Prithviraj to Ranbir," "Amitabh's 70s versus Amitabh's 2000s comeback" — and Trivana generates a hosted game you can share with one link. Creators use this pattern for opening-weekend watch parties, long-weekend family nights, diaspora community events, and film-club discussions that need a social object more than a lecture. Hindi-cinema content creators use it as a follower challenge: post a score, tag the pack, dare the audience to beat it. The pack stays on the side of fan challenge and social object rather than trying to be a Hindi-cinema encyclopedia — the point isn't to cover every trivia bullet, it's to let fans argue about what they already know and share the result.
Raj is one of Trivana's seven AI hosts, and he's the default voice for Bollywood games because his tone carries the warmth and comedic timing that Hindi cinema actually expects from its narrators. He runs your game end-to-end in English with Desi gameshow energy, and the same personality carries through in Hindi and Hinglish — so a family WhatsApp group in Mumbai, a college friends' chat in Bengaluru, and a diaspora group in New Jersey can all play in whatever language the room defaults to. On paid plans, Smart Host voice reactions mean Raj reacts specifically to the answer each player gave — a different line for nailing the DDLJ question than for missing the Sholay one — so the game feels less like a form and more like a friend in the room who grew up on the same films. If a group wants a different vibe, Priya brings a softer, warmer Hindi delivery, and Jasper or Blaze carry the round in English-only high-energy gameshow mode for mixed-language friend circles.
How To Play + Share
Yes. The Bollywood pack is free to play in the browser. No signup, no download — just open the link and start.
Yes. You can build a custom Bollywood game — any decade, star, director, or film — in about 30 seconds and share it as a single link.
Trivana supports multiple languages, including Hindi. You can create a Bollywood game in Hindi and the AI host will deliver it in Hindi end to end.
Any era, any topic, any language — AI-hosted, shareable, instant.
Create your own game