SigmaStory
  • Creator Economy
    • Content Creators
    • Influencer Life
  • Social Media
  • Tech
    • Startups
  • Entertainment
    • Web Series
    • OTT
  • Pop Culture
    • Memes
    • Podcast
SigmaStorySigmaStory
  • Creator Economy
    • Content Creators
    • Influencer Life
  • Content Creation
  • Entertainment
    • Web Series
    • OTT
  • Social Media
  • Pop Culture
  • Memes
  • Tech
  • Podcast
  • Startups
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
Startups

Dhruv Rathee’s AI Fiesta: From YouTube Fame to Startup Scrutiny, Scam & Success

The all-in-one AI app raced to 3 million ARR and 40,000 paid users in weeks, but faced an internet backlash that tested Dhruv Rathee’s transparency and resilience.

Tanu Rawat
ByTanu Rawat
Content Writer
Tanu Rawat is an enthusiastic content writer with a Bachelor's in Journalism and Mass Communication, who writes about the creator economy and creators' news.
Follow:
October 13, 2025 Google Preferred Source
Dhruv Rathee AI Fiesta

India’s most trusted digital educator and YouTuber, Dhruv Rathee, has always been known for simplifying complex topics. But this time, the tables turned when he stepped into the complex world of tech entrepreneurship. His latest venture, AI Fiesta, an ambitious “AI super-app,” became an overnight sensation and controversy.

 Just six weeks after launch, the platform reported over 3.5 million users, 20 million messages exchanged, and 40,000 paying subscribers, along with a whopping $3 million annual recurring revenue (ARR). Yet, the praise quickly gave way to skepticism, online backlash, and a flood of “scam” allegations that forced Rathee to address his critics head-on.

When AI Fiesta launched in August 2025, Rathee and his co-founders promised something revolutionary: a single app giving Indian users access to top AI tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, Perplexity, Grok, and DeepSeek, all under one affordable subscription. 

For Indian audiences struggling with international pricing, AI Fiesta’s UPI payment option, multi-AI comparison tools, and Hindi language support made it an instant hit. The company claimed users could save up to ₹70,000 a year compared to subscribing to each tool separately, a massive draw for India’s growing creator and student community.

But as soon as the app went viral, critics on X (Twitter), Reddit, and YouTube began poking holes in the product. The backlash ranged from technical complaints to accusations of overhype. 

Many users claimed the token-based model, which offered 400,000 monthly tokens, felt misleading since the tokens were shared across all AIs, reducing real usage limits.

Others argued the platform was merely an “AI aggregator” reselling public APIs, without genuine innovation. Some even mocked it as “a college project packaged like a startup.”

Adding fuel to the fire, online “exposés” accused AI Fiesta of marketing exaggerations, such as listing “GPT-5” and “new versions” that weren’t officially released by OpenAI.

A mix of payment glitches, access delays, and angry customer reviews only intensified the criticism, pushing hashtags like #AIFiestaScam to trend.

Rathee didn’t stay silent. In a 21-minute YouTube video titled “Was I a Failure?”, he took full accountability, offering rare transparency for a startup founder. He shared internal data, 20 million total messages, an average of 400 per user, and continuous feature rollouts but admitted, “To call it a success now would be premature. Real failure only occurs when you give up, and we’re far from that.”

He detailed how the unexpected demand overwhelmed the small team, leading to technical chaos and what he called a “PR disaster.”

Rathee personally handled manual payment troubleshooting, oversaw emergency customer support hiring, and fast-tracked the creation of an AI help assistant that now auto-resolves 40% of user queries. 

He openly differentiated between genuine customer concerns and troll-driven outrage, emphasizing that feedback from users directly influenced product improvements. “I personally reached out to dozens of critics,” he shared, “and turned their suggestions into real updates.”

In true startup spirit, Rathee has turned criticism into iteration. To set AI Fiesta apart from global competitors, he announced three major updates: Super Fiesta Mode, which automatically routes user queries to the AI best suited for the task; Avatars, allowing users to chat with personalities like Gandhi, Ambedkar, or Einstein or even design their own doctor, chef, or finance advisor; and a full Hindi user interface, making it the first major AI aggregator to cater fully to non-English speakers in India.

Rathee insists that “no other AI app globally has this blend of features,” reaffirming his goal to make AI Fiesta not just a tool but a movement for accessibility.

Tech analysts now see AI Fiesta as a hybrid success: not a scam, but not a deep-tech innovation either. The platform mainly functions as an AI reseller, bundling APIs, optimizing the interface, and making premium AI tools affordable for India’s mass audience.

Its biggest edge remains smart pricing, UPI access, and Rathee’s massive loyal fanbase, which drives engagement and feedback loops.

Experts argue that in the rapidly evolving world of “agentic” AI tools, aggregators like AI Fiesta might become a new normal, offering convenience even if they don’t reinvent technology. For Rathee, the journey from educator to entrepreneur has been both empowering and humbling.

Dhruv Rathee’s AI Fiesta captures both the ambition and the vulnerability of India’s creator-led startup wave. It shows how transparency, fast learning, and cultural inclusivity can win back trust, but also how easily marketing hype can spark backlash in the digital age. 

As AI Fiesta continues to grow, Rathee’s challenge will be balancing bold vision with grounded honesty, a test that could define not just his startup, but the credibility of creator entrepreneurship in India.

TAGGED:AI

Popular Stories

Rode Creator of the Year Awards 2025

RØDE Creator of the Year Awards 2025 Opens for $200,000 Global Prize Pool

Manoj Dey YouTube Story

Manoj Dey: The Small-Town Dreamer Who Became YouTube Guru Earning in Crores

Independent Filmmakers Challenge Bollywood Giants with Crowdfunded Nukkad Naatak

Independent Filmmakers Take ₹1 Crore Loan to Self-Release Their Film ‘Nukkad Naatak’ After Bollywood Rejection

Soamjena YouTube Story Entrepreneur

Inspiring Story of Soamjena: From Odisha’s Broken House to Dubai Luxury and YouTube

Paritosh Anand YouTube Story

Paritosh Anand: From Introverted School Kid Who Left NDA to Founder of We Smile Media

Recent

Nikhil Kamath Spills On Marriage Fears and Dating

Nikhil Kamath Spills On Marriage Fears And Why Being A Hypocrite Is Actually A Superpower

Product designer Shreya Heda breaks down her massive paycheck and reality of startup life

₹72 Lakhs at 24? Inside the Viral Salary Confession of a Bengaluru Product Designer

News Pinch Founder Abhinav Pandey Finally Reveals Why He Left Lallantop

News Pinch Founder Abhinav Pandey Finally Reveals Why He Left Lallantop, Defends His Viral Rant Against TV Anchors

Nishu Tiwari vs Thugesh Controversy Over Viral Meme Sensations Video Copy

Nishu Tiwari vs Thugesh: Controversy Erupts Over Alleged Stealing of Video Concept

SigmaStory

SigmaStory is a digital media platform covering the creator economy, social media, and influencer life. We publish news and stories about creators, pop culture, entertainment, technology, and content creation.

Trending Topics

  • Creator Economy
  • Pop Culture
  • Influencer Life
  • Visual Stories
  • Podcast
  • Entertainment
  • Content Creators
  • Social Media
  • Memes
  • Web Series
  • OTT
  • Online Earning
  • How-to Guides

Company

  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us

SigmaStory | All rights reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?