Unboxing a ₹1200, 256 GB ultrathin iPhone Air A sealed box reveals a ₹1200 iPhone Air with 256 GB storage and a cable inside. The phone is extremely thin with a single camera, boots for the first time, and completes setup smoothly. Its light, ultra‑slippery body keeps sliding from the hand, yet it remains functional after the drops.
Slipperiness sparks a hockey match for an iPhone 17 Pro The device’s glide inspires a joke about playing hockey with it, quickly turning into a real match. A safety warning urges viewers not to try such stunts at home as Vikram and Bhawani take sides. The game begins, and Vikram wins the promised iPhone 17 Pro.
A ‘Chidiya Udd’ bluff escalates into making the iPhone fly A new wager offers the iPhone Air to the winner and punishment to the loser, starting with the “Chidiya Udd” reflex game. The call “iPhone udd” triggers an argument, capped by the claim that if a Thar can be flown, this phone can too. The phone is flown into the air before moving on to more tests.
Attack hit and first bend test leave it working On a coordinated count of three, a group strike leaves the phone unharmed. A follow‑up bend test produces only a slight bend, and the device keeps running. Despite repeated strain, all functions remain intact.
A studio rig applies ~180 N in a decisive stress attempt Malveer tries to straighten the bent frame but fails. In the Mr Indian Hacker studio, a custom mechanism clamps the phone for a controlled push. Approximately 180 newtons of force are applied to see whether it bends or holds.
Under controlled force, the iPhone Air finally bends The rig completes the job, and the iPhone Air yields to the applied force. Applause follows the conclusive bend. The experiment concludes with a successful bend.