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A study by an Indian industry body and consultancy PricewaterhouseCoopers has
In 2006, about two dozen Bollywood films were accompanied by video games such as Don , modelled on a movie of the same name about a cool gangster played by Shah Rukh Khan, compared to just three the year before.
Many more Bollywood films are expected to tie up with gaming companies in 2007. “The Indian market is poised for a gaming explosion,” said Rajesh Sawhney, head of Reliance Entertainment, a division of India’s biggest business house, which launched a gaming company called Zapak in November last year.
Gaming based on Bollywood films and personalities is already estimated to be worth around Rs. 100 million ($2.2 million). Companies are planning to invest heavily in this area in the next few years. It comes as no surprise then that when it came to choosing a brand ambassador, Zapak picked Bollywood action hero Salman Khan. Several games will star the muscular Khan, who promised at the launch to help develop “wacky” concepts to keep his fans happy.
The siren Sameera Reddy, more famous perhaps for her shimmying than her acting, is a sword-wielding street fighter in a game developed by Jump and named after her. Even the 64-year-old movie legend Amitabh Bachchan has not been left behind. There’s a game being developed which is based on his film Baabul about widow remarriage. Anywhere else in the world, his age and the subject matter would have been a strict no-no for a gaming concept, but not in Bollywood-crazed India.
“We are forever looking for new games, and the best way to find new games is in Bollywood films,” said Neeraj Roy, head of the Hungama Mobile portal.
Many Bollywood video games are designed for mobile phones, not surprising in a country where cell phones outnumber personal computers by more than ten to one.
Although the company behind the Bachchan game, a mobile portal called mauj.com, is charging Rs. 50 ($1) for the game download, many games are free at the moment. The games also work as a marketing tool for films, at little cost to producers, with game developers paying for the rights to develop and promote games based on particular movies.
“As many new films are made, there are new games on them. So it is a win-win situation for us, the Bollywood companies, and gamers at large,” Roy added.








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