INTRODUCING ROCK BAND RIVALS

the best party game on the planet.

Whether your party is online or in your living room, Rock Band Rivals has you covered. Play with friends in Online Quickplay, or make new ones with our online session browser. Join a Crew to compete in weekly online challenges in Rivals mode, perform your way through a rock documentary about your band in Rockudrama, plus get more than 50 free songs, new rock shop items, and access to future updates.

E Masti ((free)) -

Lucky live-streamed his cat, Pickles, trying to catch a laser dot on the wall. 47 people watched. One person, a nurse working a night shift in a city far away, commented: “I forgot to smile today. Thank you.”

Meera taught her shy uncle how to use a meme generator. He made a joke about his own bald head and sent it to the family group. For the first time in years, everyone replied with laughing emojis.

In the small, sleepy town of Sonapur, where the internet was as unpredictable as monsoon rain, three friends — Rohan, Meera, and Lucky — had discovered a secret: "e masti" wasn't just about scrolling or gaming. It was about creating joy through the screen.

Their mission? To spread one smile per day using the internet. Not likes. Not shares. Real laughter.

“That’s the point,” she said. “The ‘e’ is for everyone.”

They created a channel called E-Masti Express .

Rohan found an old video of his late grandfather telling a silly riddle. He shared it with just one friend — that friend shared it with ten, and soon, the whole town was guessing the answer.

Not everything went smoothly. Trolls appeared in their comments. Once, the Wi-Fi crashed mid-stream during Dadi Ji’s bhajan session. Another time, Meera accidentally shared a cooking video where she burned the puri — but instead of mocking her, viewers sent their own burnt food photos. That became their most-watched episode:

Lucky live-streamed his cat, Pickles, trying to catch a laser dot on the wall. 47 people watched. One person, a nurse working a night shift in a city far away, commented: “I forgot to smile today. Thank you.”

Meera taught her shy uncle how to use a meme generator. He made a joke about his own bald head and sent it to the family group. For the first time in years, everyone replied with laughing emojis.

In the small, sleepy town of Sonapur, where the internet was as unpredictable as monsoon rain, three friends — Rohan, Meera, and Lucky — had discovered a secret: "e masti" wasn't just about scrolling or gaming. It was about creating joy through the screen.

Their mission? To spread one smile per day using the internet. Not likes. Not shares. Real laughter.

“That’s the point,” she said. “The ‘e’ is for everyone.”

They created a channel called E-Masti Express .

Rohan found an old video of his late grandfather telling a silly riddle. He shared it with just one friend — that friend shared it with ten, and soon, the whole town was guessing the answer.

Not everything went smoothly. Trolls appeared in their comments. Once, the Wi-Fi crashed mid-stream during Dadi Ji’s bhajan session. Another time, Meera accidentally shared a cooking video where she burned the puri — but instead of mocking her, viewers sent their own burnt food photos. That became their most-watched episode: