Bharat Ke Super Founders Unlocks Fresh Capital And High-Impact Deals This Week On Amazon MX Player Show

This week on Bharat Ke Super Founders features space tech, parenting, health and food pitches seeking a share of the ₹100 crore pool. Investors weigh execution plans, impact and long term potential, with a notable non-deal moment shaping discussions on purpose-led growth and responsible scaling.

This week’s episodes of Amazon MX Player’s entrepreneurial reality series Bharat Ke Super Founders delivered major deals and tough rejections. Startups from space-tech, food, parenting and health pitched for a share of the ₹100 crore pool. Investors weighed not just numbers, but founder conviction, long-term vision and social impact, making it one of the season’s most intense weeks.

The evaluation table featured Dr. A. Velumani, Ankur Mittal, Srini Srinivasan, Shivam Mishra and Ahana Gautam. Each tycoon brought a different lens on risk and growth, while Suniel Shetty guided founders through probing, often emotional discussions. The format again moved beyond slide decks, testing clarity of thought, resilience and readiness to scale responsibly.

Bharat Ke Super Founders space-tech and high-stakes startup bets

The largest cheque of the week went to Cosmoserve, led by former ISRO scientist Dr. Chiranjeevi. Drawing from work on Chandrayaan and Gaganyaan, Dr. Chiranjeevi outlined a space infrastructure plan targeting removal of 100 dead satellites by 2028. Competing offers came in before the panel closed a ₹5.5 crore deal, with Dr. A. Velumani committing ₹5 crore and Srini Srinivasan adding ₹50 lakh.

Cosmoserve’s pitch underlined how Bharat Ke Super Founders is backing frontier sectors while insisting on clear execution paths. The combination of proven scientific experience, defined timelines and a measurable target in orbital debris cleanup helped convince investors. It also positioned space-tech as one of the most capital-intensive, yet investable, themes on the show so far.

Bharat Ke Super Founders parenting and wellness innovations

One of the week’s most debated pitches came from Ulti-Mate Parenting, founded by Satish Kshirsagar and Amruta Jog. The startup offered a parenting app aimed at families with children aged 3 to 13, focusing on life skills and emotional resilience. Despite a personal investment of ₹95 lakh, the founders faced serious doubts around addressable market and commercial scalability.

During Ulti-Mate Parenting’s appearance, Shanti Mohan used a one-on-one card to challenge the model further. After detailed questioning, the panel proposed an acquisition-only structure, effectively asking the founders to swap control for capital. Choosing to protect their mission, Satish Kshirsagar and Amruta Jog declined the offer and left, delivering a rare, purpose-first non-deal moment.

Bharat Ke Super Founders food brands and QSR expansion

Food concepts also dominated the pitch room, starting with Babai Tiffins, a heritage South Indian brand from Nellore. Known for homestyle cooking and signature breakfast dishes, Babai Tiffins highlighted how regional food traditions can travel beyond origin cities. The presentation stressed legacy, recipe consistency and cultural nostalgia, showing that long-standing family businesses can adapt to new formats and geographies.

The breakfast theme gained sharper commercial focus with Babai Kitchen, a vegetarian, Andhra-style QSR brand founded by Ravi Morampudi. Serving nearly 1.9 lakh orders each month and earning about ₹7 crore in monthly revenue, Babai Kitchen targeted India’s fragmented breakfast QSR space. Ravi Morampudi sought a ₹6 crore investment for 5% equity, winning unanimous support as the panel invested together.

The week’s closer, RxMen, shifted attention to sensitive but vital health needs. The men’s health ecosystem focuses on sexual and hormonal wellness, an area where silence and stigma often prevent treatment. Having already treated over 10,000 men and recording ₹9 crore in annual revenue, RxMen secured a ₹30 lakh investment, signalling investor faith in thoughtful, privacy-aware healthcare solutions.

Diversity in healthcare pitches continued with Shhe Foods, which entered with a nutrition-first brand designed for women. The company combines Ayurvedic principles with modern nutritional science to support different female life stages, from early adulthood to later years. Together, RxMen and Shhe Foods showed Bharat Ke Super Founders backing gender-specific health and nutrition models with clear problem statements.

Across all pitches, Bharat Ke Super Founders reinforced its central idea: founders are judged on courage, clarity and execution, as much as topline numbers. With Suniel Shetty anchoring a panel that commands a ₹100 crore pool, the series keeps showing real investment decisions on screen. New episodes stream free on Amazon MX Player, the Amazon shopping app, Prime Video, Fire TV and Connected TVs every Friday and Saturday.

Read more about: amazon mx player
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