Weekend Ka Vaar: When Ego Overshadowed Gameplay
- Sameer Verma
- 2 minutes ago
- 2 min read
This week’s Weekend Ka Vaar wasn’t about strategy or teamwork — it was about ego spirals, empty threats, and selective outrage. The house didn’t burn from competition; it burned from self-importance.
Kunica — Playing the Law, Not the Game
Some contestants weaponize emotion. Kunica seems to have weaponized intimidation. Instead of playing the social game, she’s busy playing “Who can I threaten next?”The talk of filing cases and throwing around phrases like “Naak se khoon nikal dungi” isn’t dominance — it’s deflection. That kind of language doesn’t make you strong; it makes you unsafe to play with. If you can’t win an argument without hinting at legal or physical threats, maybe the game isn’t the problem — the mirror is.
Farhana — The Chaos Constant
Every house has a storm. This one has Farhana. Scroll through any community feed and you’ll find the same pattern — loud entrances, emotional exits, and a complete allergy to accountability.She isn’t playing to win hearts or tasks; she’s playing to win noise. And in a house that’s already overflowing with drama, that’s not strategy, it’s self-sabotage.
Tanya — When Hypocrisy Becomes a Habit
Tanya’s version of self-awareness seems to have gone on vacation. From body-shaming comments to mocking others’ relationships, she’s been dishing out what she couldn’t take.The irony? The same person who teared up over one personal remark about her boyfriend didn’t hesitate to drag Ashnoor’s name into the mud. You can’t demand respect and deny it in the same breath — that’s not bold, it’s brittle.
Neelam — Present, But Not Really
If energy could be converted into contribution, Neelam would still be on zero watts. Apart from the occasional body-shaming jab, there’s not much she’s added to the season. The audience expects fire or fairness — not filler. And sadly, she’s been the latter for too long.
Salman’s Court — Channeling 'Battle of Galwan' Energy
Salman Khan handled this chaos with his usual mix of humor and sharpness, but you could tell even he was done babysitting. His tone was straddling the stern-commander vibe you’d expect from the front lines of his upcoming film Battle of Galwan (about the 2020 Galwan Valley clash). The Indian Express+2www.ndtv.com+2He’s seen contestants fight smart, fight fair, and fight real. This week? None of that showed up. If he were playing the commanding officer role he’s prepping for in the film, the house would have been on stricter orders and tighter discipline.


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