For years, Yash Raj Films’ Spy Universe has been Bollywood’s golden goose – a money-spinning franchise that gave the industry its biggest-ever hits, transformed stars into larger-than-life agents, and set benchmarks for event cinema in India. From Salman Khan’s Tiger franchise to Shah Rukh Khan’s thunderous comeback with Pathaan, these films didn’t just pull crowds – they created hysteria, rewriting box office history and cementing YRF as the studio that could stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Hollywood franchises.
But with War 2, the empire has cracked. The film, billed as YRF’s “biggest action spectacle ever,” has instead turned into its most humiliating misfire, shaking audience confidence & worrying exhibitors. What was supposed to be a roaring expansion of the Spyverse has instead exposed its weakest links.
Let’s talk numbers – because numbers don’t lie. Each Spyverse film, until now, brought in hefty numbers at the box office:
Pathaan – ₹543.05 cr.
Tiger Zinda Hai – ₹339.16 cr.
War – ₹318.01 cr.
Tiger 3 – ₹285.52 cr.
Ek Tha Tiger – ₹198.78 cr.
War 2 – ₹175 cr. (lifetime estimates)
To put this in perspective – War 2 will finish ₹362 crore behind Pathaan and nearly ₹150 crore short of Hrithik’s first War. For a film carrying the Spyverse brand, two megastars, and sky-high pre-release hype, this freefall isn’t just underperformance – it’s a franchise-altering disaster.
From Ek Tha Tiger to Tiger 3, the formula has barely evolved – guns, gadgets, glamour, and the girl in a bikini. By the time War 2 arrived, fatigue had set in.
An exhibitor from Mumbai, on condition of anonymity, put it bluntly: “Audiences aren’t coming for another round of bikini songs and recycled patriotism. They want storytelling, not just stunts on steroids.”
Budget ballooned, VFX hype skyrocketed, and expectations went through the roof. But when the dust settled, War 2 looked less like a slick espionage thriller and more like a confused, bloated showreel.
A trade analyst quipped, “War 2 wanted to be Mission Impossible. What we got was Mission Impossible-to-sit-through after the first hour.”
The Spyverse isn’t just any franchise – it’s Aditya Chopra’s crown jewel. Pathaan’s ₹543 crore run had convinced Bollywood that the brand was unshakable. But War 2 has ripped open a harsh reality: franchises don’t guarantee success when storytelling falters.
“This isn’t a routine flop; this is a dent in the Spyverse brand. If even Hrithik Roshan and NTR Jr. together can’t pull crowds, then something is seriously broken,” an overseas distributor remarked.
War 2 isn’t just another flop – it’s the lowest rung of the Spyverse ladder, a film that failed to justify its existence in a legacy of blockbuster tentpoles. While Pathaan sits at the top as the king of the Spyverse, War 2 sits at the bottom like a cautionary tale of hype, hubris, and half-baked storytelling.