Mumbai: Creativefuel executed a large-scale, multi-platform digital activation for the JioHotstar x Superman campaign, delivering over 12,000 content assets, generating 210 million+ views, and reaching 160 million+ people across platforms, including short-form video and social networks.
The agency led the campaign end-to-end, from strategy and creative ideation to execution and amplification. Designed entirely from scratch, the activation focused on embedding the Superman release into existing internet behaviour, rather than relying on short-term paid visibility.
Executed over a six-day window, the campaign followed a culture-first amplification model, leveraging meme ecosystems and AI-native creator networks at scale. AI creators played a key role in rapidly adapting, localising, and scaling culturally relevant formats during the execution period, allowing the campaign to move in real time with shifting internet momentum.
Familiar viral cultural moments, including “Thoda Galti Ho Gaya Maalik”, were recreated in platform-native formats. As the content was designed to feel organic rather than campaign-led, it was picked up naturally by audiences and creators alike, enabling the activation to extend well beyond planned amplification. This resulted in strong organic traction across platforms, including visibility on Reddit and pick-up across multiple news media outlets.
Commenting on the campaign, Tiya Wadhwani, COO at Creativefuel, said, “The objective was not just reach, but relevance at scale.” She added, “Pulling off something at this scale takes sharp strategy and even sharper execution. From planning and coordination to on ground delivery across platforms, this campaign was a true team effort. Credit to everyone involved for maintaining quality, cultural relevance and speed while operating at massive scale.”
The activation underscores Creativefuel’s growing focus on culture-led, AI-enabled digital storytelling, demonstrating how entertainment launches can achieve scale by aligning with internet-native formats and behaviours rather than conventional media-led approaches.
















