If you've finished Season 2, the third season is scheduled to release on Netflix on November 13, 2025 . It will focus on human trafficking cases inspired by the 2012 Baby Falak incident.
While Season 1 focused on the singular, devastating 2012 bus gang rape case, Season 2 shifts gears into a different kind of horror: the "Kachcha-Baniyan" gang. By moving from a well-known national tragedy to a fictionalized version of a historical criminal phenomenon, the showrunners managed to maintain the tension without feeling like they were exploiting a specific victim's story. This shift allowed for a broader exploration of Delhi's class divide.
Shah delivers a performance that is almost silent. It’s in the way she drinks cold coffee, the way she stares at a crime scene photo without flinching, the way she negotiates with politicians who see rape as a PR problem. This is not superhero policing; this is bureaucratic grief. That authenticity is the show’s secret weapon.
: Investigates the resurgence of the "Kachcha Baniyan" gang, a real-life criminal group known for brutal home invasions in Delhi.
The series is recognized for its gritty, realistic portrayal of Delhi, utilizing high-end equipment and modern streaming standards:
If you've finished Season 2, the third season is scheduled to release on Netflix on November 13, 2025 . It will focus on human trafficking cases inspired by the 2012 Baby Falak incident.
While Season 1 focused on the singular, devastating 2012 bus gang rape case, Season 2 shifts gears into a different kind of horror: the "Kachcha-Baniyan" gang. By moving from a well-known national tragedy to a fictionalized version of a historical criminal phenomenon, the showrunners managed to maintain the tension without feeling like they were exploiting a specific victim's story. This shift allowed for a broader exploration of Delhi's class divide.
Shah delivers a performance that is almost silent. It’s in the way she drinks cold coffee, the way she stares at a crime scene photo without flinching, the way she negotiates with politicians who see rape as a PR problem. This is not superhero policing; this is bureaucratic grief. That authenticity is the show’s secret weapon.
: Investigates the resurgence of the "Kachcha Baniyan" gang, a real-life criminal group known for brutal home invasions in Delhi.
The series is recognized for its gritty, realistic portrayal of Delhi, utilizing high-end equipment and modern streaming standards: