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E‑Rupee Pilots Put India at Forefront of BRICS Digital Currency Push

E‑Rupee Pilots Put India at Forefront of BRICS Digital Currency Push

India is accelerating adoption of its central bank digital currency (CBDC), the e‑rupee, by routing welfare payments through pilot programs, while simultaneously preparing to showcase a BRICS‑wide digital currency initiative at the bloc’s 2026 summit. The move aims to reduce subsidy leakage, create a clear use case for the e‑rupee, and position India as a leader in cross‑border CBDC integration.

Key Highlights of India’s E‑Rupee Push

  • 10 pilot programs are underway, channeling parts of India’s $80 billion welfare system through the e‑rupee.
  • Maharashtra (Phulenagar village): Farmers receive programmable subsidies covering up to 80% of drip‑irrigation costs, spendable only at approved vendors.
  • Gujarat: Target to onboard 7.5 million households eligible for subsidized food by June 2026, using e‑rupee transfers.
  • Adoption figures: About 10 million users as of April 2026, with cumulative transactions of $3.6 billion since launch in December 2022 — small compared to UPI’s $300 billion monthly volume.

Strategic Context: BRICS Digital Currency Plan

  • The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is urging the government to advance a CBDC linkage proposal across BRICS economies (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa).
  • Goal: Streamline cross‑border trade and reduce reliance on the U.S. dollar.
  • Risk: The initiative faces geopolitical pressure, with U.S. tariffs already imposed on Indian imports tied to Russian crude purchases.

Comparative Snapshot: E‑Rupee vs UPI

FeatureE‑Rupee (CBDC)UPI (Unified Payments Interface)
LaunchDec 20222016
Users (Apr 2026)~10 million300+ million
Monthly Transactions~$0.3 billion~$300 billion
ProgrammabilityYes (restricted use cases)No (open payments)
Adoption StrategyWelfare pilots, subsidiesOrganic consumer/business uptake

Risks & Challenges

  • Adoption gap: Welfare pilots may create a captive user base but not necessarily genuine enthusiasm.
  • Geopolitical backlash: U.S. opposition to BRICS currency alternatives could trigger trade tensions.
  • Competition with UPI: The e‑rupee must prove utility beyond welfare transfers to compete with India’s already dominant digital payments ecosystem.

Outlook

  • Short term (2026): Welfare pilots will expand, especially in agriculture and food distribution.
  • Medium term (2026 BRICS Summit): India will push for a CBDC interoperability framework across BRICS.
  • Long term: Success depends on whether the e‑rupee can evolve from a welfare‑linked instrument into a mainstream payment option with cross‑border utility.

Infosys Completes Stratus Acquisition to Drive AI‑Led Insurance Transformation

Infosys Completes Stratus Acquisition to Drive AI‑Led Insurance Transformation

Infosys (NSE, BSE, NYSE: INFY), a global leader in AI‑first consulting and technology services, announced the completion of its acquisition of Stratus, a premier technology solutions provider for the property and casualty (P&C) insurance sector. This milestone follows the company’s earlier disclosure on March 25, 2026.

It was in late last month when Infosys announced that it is acquiring two major U.S. companies — Optimum Healthcare and Stratus. 

AI is reshaping the insurance industry worldwide—enhancing decision‑making in underwriting, claims, and fraud detection, while driving intelligent systems and operational efficiency. The P&C segment is at the forefront of this transformation, propelled by the demand for claims automation, advanced underwriting, and sophisticated risk modeling amid rising claim volumes and heightened risk exposure. Infosys is enabling P&C insurers to unlock AI‑driven value through digital and data‑centric transformation.

Headquartered in the United States, Stratus brings a team of over 450 professionals with deep domain expertise, consulting excellence, and advanced technology capabilities. As a leading Guidewire Software partner, Stratus delivers transformation solutions for P&C insurers, with a global delivery footprint spanning the U.S., Canada, and India. Its offerings include end‑to‑end Guidewire InsuranceSuite capabilities across PolicyCenter, ClaimCenter, BillingCenter, integrations, upgrades, cloud migrations, and managed services.

By combining Stratus’ strong Guidewire and P&C consulting expertise with Infosys’ global scale, Infosys Topaz AI suite, and Infosys Cobalt cloud offerings, the company is positioned to accelerate insurers’ core modernization, cloud adoption, data‑driven transformation, and customer experience enhancement. The acquisition also strengthens Infosys’ reach among new insurance clients and key decision‑making centers worldwide.

IAF Invites Industry and Academia to Mehar Baba Competition‑3 for Swarm Drone Radar Development

IAF Invites Industry and Academia to Mehar Baba Competition‑3 for Swarm Drone Radar Development

The Indian Air Force (IAF) has officially launched the third edition of the Mehar Baba Competition (MBC‑3), themed “Collaborative Drone‑Based Surveillance Radars.” Registration begins on 27 April 2026, inviting Indian industries, start‑ups, academic institutions, and research establishments to participate in developing swarm drone radar systems for contested environments.

Key Highlights of MBC‑3

  • Announced by: Hon’ble Raksha Rajya Mantri Shri Sanjay Seth at Aero India 2025
  • Theme: Collaborative swarm of Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) functioning as airborne radar to detect, track, and report aerial targets
  • Objective: Provide accurate target location to a centralised monitoring station in contested environments
  • Registration: Opens 27 April 2026 via the official IAF portal Vision Document
  • Support: Meritorious participants will receive development funding from IAF; top three winners will be awarded

Legacy of Mehar Baba Competition

  • Launch Year: 2018, as an IAF initiative to encourage indigenous aviation technology development
  • Economic Impact: Generated orders worth approximately ₹2000 crore for India’s unmanned systems industry
  • Previous Editions:
    • MBC‑1 (2018): Swarm Drones for Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief Operations
    • MBC‑2 (2022–2024): Swarm Drone‑Based Foreign Object Debris Detection on Aircraft Operating Surfaces. Winners included Ayaan Autonomous Systems (Pune) and Fleet RF Pvt Ltd (Greater Noida)

Honouring Air Commodore Mehar Singh (“Mehar Baba”)

  • Born: 1915, Lyallapur (now Faisalabad, Pakistan)
  • Career: Joined Royal Air Force College, Cranwell in 1934
  • Distinctions:
    • Awarded Distinguished Service Order (DSO) at age 29 for leadership and bravery
    • First IAF officer to receive the Maha Vir Chakra (MVC)
    • Led mission carrying the first Indian Army contingent to Srinagar in 1947
    • First to land at Leh airstrip, then the highest in the world

Why MBC‑3 Matters

  • Strategic Innovation: Strengthens India’s defence capabilities in drone swarm radar technology
  • Industry‑Academia Collaboration: Bridges gaps between research, start‑ups, and defence users
  • Atmanirbhar Bharat: Supports India’s vision of self‑reliance in aerospace and defence technology

Takeaway

The Mehar Baba Competition‑3 is not just a contest but a national innovation platform—driving indigenous defence technology, fostering collaboration, and honouring a legendary air warrior. With registrations opening on 27 April 2026, Indian innovators have a unique opportunity to shape the future of aerospace surveillance.

India's AAA Gaming Evolution

India's AAA Gaming Evolution

In gaming, “AAA” refers to blockbuster video games developed and published with very high budgets, large teams, and extensive marketing campaigns—similar to Hollywood movies in scale and ambition. These titles are expected to deliver cutting‑edge graphics, polished gameplay, and mass appeal.

AAA games are the industry’s top tier, produced by major publishers or studios with hundreds of developers. Development costs often exceed $100–200 million, with marketing sometimes costing even more. Examples include – Final Fantasy VII, The Witcher 3, Cyberpunk 2077, Call of Duty, Assassin’s Creed, Grand Theft Auto V.

India is now entering the AAA gaming space, with studios like Tara Gaming (co‑founded by Amitabh Bachchan and author Amish Tripathi) developing The Age of Bhaarat, touted as the country’s first true AAA title inspired by the Ramayana. This marks a shift away from India’s reliance on real‑money gaming toward blockbuster, globally competitive productions.

Several other Indian studios are also actively developing AAA (triple‑A) games, marking a major shift from casual and real‑money gaming toward globally competitive, high‑budget titles. The most prominent names include LightFury Games, SuperGaming, Mayhem Studios, Dot9 Games, and Aaryavarta Technologies.  

Current Developments

  • Tara Gaming (Pune): Building The Age of Bhaarat, a dark fantasy action‑adventure RPG inspired by Indian epics.
  • Team size: ~140 developers, including 40 in Pune.
  • Narration: Trailer voiced by Amitabh Bachchan, who is also a co‑founder.
  • Vision: To position India alongside China’s Black Myth: Wukong as a cultural export through gaming.
  • Global Context: Black Myth: Wukong sold 20M units in its first month, showing demand for culturally rich AAA titles.

Market Shifts

  • India’s Gaming Market Size: Valued at $4 billion in 2025.
  • Dominance of RMGs: 85% of revenue came from fantasy sports, poker, and rummy.
  • Regulatory Change: The Online Gaming Bill 2025 banned RMGs, forcing platforms like WinZO and PokerBaazi to shut down.
  • Impact: Ban redirected focus toward AAA development as a sustainable growth path.

Why AAA Matters for India

  • Global Revenue Potential: Rockstar’s GTA VI projected to earn $7.6B in 60 days, more than India’s film box office for two years combined.
  • Talent Base: India contributes heavily to global AAA games—Rockstar Bengaluru (1,600 professionals), Ubisoft Pune, EA Hyderabad.
  • Challenge: Domestic AAA studios need patient capital, premium‑paying audiences, and piracy protection.

Strategic Importance

  • Soft Power Window: India’s first globally scaled AAA game could act as a cultural bridge, similar to Kung Fu Panda for China.
  • Cultural Export: AAA games based on Indian epics can help global audiences engage with India’s civilization in an entertaining way.

Comparison: India vs. Global AAA

AspectIndia (Emerging)Global Leaders
Flagship TitlesThe Age of Bhaarat (in development)GTA VI, Cyberpunk 2077, Black Myth: Wukong
StudiosTara Gaming, Rockstar India (support), Ubisoft Pune, EA HyderabadRockstar, CD Projekt Red, Ubisoft, EA
Market Size$4B (2025)$200B+ global gaming market
ChallengesPiracy, limited premium audience, funding gapsHigh costs, crunch culture, franchise fatigue
OpportunityMythology‑driven AAA exportsEstablished franchises, cinematic universes

Key Takeaway

  • India’s AAA gaming journey is just beginning, with The Age of Bhaarat positioned as a landmark project.
  • Success depends on global storytelling appeal, patient investment, and overcoming piracy.
  • If executed well, India could establish itself as a new cultural powerhouse in gaming.

India’s Gaming Evolution (2010–2026)

India’s Gaming Evolution Timeline

YearMilestoneImpact
2010–2014Rise of mobile casual games (*Teen Patti*, *Ludo King*)Established India as a mobile‑first gaming market.
2015–2018Real Money Gaming (RMG) boom (fantasy sports, poker, rummy)Accounted for 80%+ of industry revenue; attracted VC funding.
2019–2021Global studios expand in India (Rockstar Bengaluru, Ubisoft Pune, EA Hyderabad)Indian talent contributes to AAA titles like *GTA V* and *Assassin’s Creed*.
2022–2024Esports surge (*BGMI*, *Free Fire*)India becomes one of the world’s largest esports audiences.
2025Online Gaming Bill bans RMGsPlatforms like WinZO and PokerBaazi shut down; industry forced to pivot.
2025–2026Launch of Tara Gaming’s The Age of BhaaratIndia’s first homegrown AAA project, inspired by Ramayana, co‑founded by Amitabh Bachchan.
2026Record $4B market size despite RMG banFocus shifts to premium AAA titles, esports, and cultural exports.
  • Pre‑2014: DPSU‑style modest gaming presence, dominated by casual mobile titles.
  • 2015–2024: RMGs drove revenue but limited India’s global gaming footprint.
  • 2025 onward: Regulatory ban on RMGs created a pivot point, pushing studios toward AAA development.
  • 2026:The Age of Bhaarat positions India alongside China’s Black Myth: Wukong as a cultural export through gaming.

India’s Biggest Defence Pavilion Yet Steals the Spotlight at DSA & NSA 2026

India’s Biggest Defence Pavilion Yet Steals the Spotlight at DSA & NSA 2026

At DSA & NSA 2026 in Kuala Lumpur (20–23 April), Additional Secretary (Defence Production) Shri Dinesh Mahur led the Indian delegation, underscoring New Delhi’s intent to expand defence exports. The joint inauguration of the India Pavilion by Shri Mahur and High Commissioner B N Reddy adds weight to the country’s presence.

Defence Services Asia (DSA) National Security Asia (NSA) 2026 is Asia’s largest defence and homeland security exhibition, held from 20–23 April 2026 at MITEC, Kuala Lumpur. It brings together over 1,400 companies from 60+ countries, 500 international delegations, and 50,000 trade visitors, making it a premier global platform for defence exports, technology showcases, and strategic cooperation.

Indian delegation at the 19th edition of Defence Services Asia & Network Security Asia 2026 in Kuala Lumpur marked a major push to expand India's defence exports.

Key Highlights of India Pavilion

  • Largest-ever participation: 25 companies showcasing India’s defence capabilities.
  • DPSUs present: HAL, MDL, Bharat Dynamics Ltd, Munitions India Ltd, Advanced Weapons & Equipment Ltd.
  • Private industry & IDEX startups: Reflecting innovation and competitiveness.
  • Strategic significance: Expanding India’s global defence footprint and industry capability.

India’s Pavilion at DSA & NSA 2026

List of Indian Participants

  • DPSUs: Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL), Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Limited (MDL), Bharat Dynamics Limited (BDL), Munitions India Limited (MIL), Advanced Weapons & Equipment India Limited (AWEIL), BrahMos Aerospace.
  • Private Defence Industry: Indian private defence manufacturers showcasing armoured solutions, UAVs, electronic warfare systems, and cyber defence technologies.
  • IDEX Startups: Innovation-driven firms focusing on AI, robotics, unmanned systems, advanced sensors, and cyber security solutions.

Strategic Significance

  • Largest-ever participation: 25 companies signal India’s intent to become a major defence exporter.
  • Balanced mix: DPSUs, private industry, and startups show comprehensive capability spectrum.
  • Regional outreach: Strengthens ties with Malaysia and ASEAN nations.
Note: Official sources confirm six DPSUs + BrahMos Aerospace; names of private firms and startups are part of the 25-company delegation but not fully disclosed publicly.

India Pavilion at DSA: Evolution (Pre‑2014 to 2026)

Pre‑2014 Era

  • Limited Delegations: India’s presence was small, led mainly by DPSUs such as HAL, BDL, and MDL.
  • Focus Areas: Aircraft platforms, missile systems, and naval shipbuilding.
  • Private Industry: Minimal involvement; pavilion was dominated by state‑owned enterprises.
  • Innovation: No startups or MSMEs — IDEX ecosystem did not exist yet.
  • Strategic Context: India was largely seen as a defence importer, and participation was symbolic, aimed at visibility in ASEAN rather than exports.

2016–2026: Growth Over the Decade

YearLocationScale of ParticipationKey Highlights
2016 (15th edition)Kuala LumpurSmall delegationHAL aircraft, BDL missiles, naval systems; limited private industry.
2018 (16th edition)Kuala LumpurExpanded DPSU presenceBrahMos Aerospace showcased for the first time; ASEAN outreach.
2020 (17th edition)Kuala LumpurModerate participationPandemic disruptions; focus on “Make in India” products.
2022 (18th edition)Kuala Lumpur15+ companiesMix of DPSUs + private industry; Atmanirbhar Bharat emphasis.
2024 (19th edition)Kuala Lumpur20+ companiesMSMEs and IDEX startups included; UAVs, cyber defence, AI.
2026 (20th edition)Kuala LumpurLargest-ever: 25 companiesLed by Shri Dinesh Mahur; joint inauguration with High Commissioner B N Reddy; DPSUs HAL, MDL, BDL, MIL, AWEIL, BrahMos Aerospace, plus private industry and IDEX startups.

Key Trends

  • Shift from Importer to Exporter: Pavilion evolved from legacy DPSU showcases to export‑ready systems.
  • Innovation Push: Post‑2022, startups and MSMEs became central, highlighting AI, robotics, UAVs, and cyber defence.
  • Regional Diplomacy: Participation increasingly used to strengthen ASEAN defence ties.
  • Record Scale in 2026: Largest‑ever pavilion with 25 companies, marking India’s ambition to be a global supplier.
In summary: Pre‑2014 India Pavilion was small and DPSU‑centric. Post‑2014 reforms transformed it into a diverse, export‑oriented showcase, culminating in the landmark 2026 participation with 25 companies — India’s biggest and most strategic presence yet.

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