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Rithvik Sahore is an Indian actor who works primarily in Hindi-language films and web series. He gained recognition through coming-of-age digital content aimed at young Indian audiences, particularly his roles in shows produced by The Viral Fever (TVF) and Dice Media, before transitioning to feature film work.
| Name | Rithvik Sahore |
|---|---|
| Occupation | Actor |
| Nationality | Indian |
| Industry | Hindi cinema, Indian web series |
| Notable works | Ferrous, Flames, Bandish Bandits, Jamtara – Sabka Number Aayega, Big Girls Don't Cry |
| Active since | 2010s |
Sahore began acting at a young age, appearing in supporting parts in Hindi films before moving to lead roles on streaming platforms. His early on-screen appearances were in commercial Bollywood productions, after which he shifted focus to longer-form digital storytelling.
Sahore appeared as a child actor in the Hindi film Ferrari Ki Sawaari (2012), directed by Rajesh Mapuskar and produced under the Vinod Chopra Films banner. The role brought him early attention as a juvenile performer.
His breakthrough as a young adult actor came with Flames, a TVF and Dice Media production created by Apoorv Singh Karki, in which he played the lead character Rajat Sinha. The series, which depicts a teenage romance set against school and tutorial-class life, ran across multiple seasons and built a sizeable young-audience following on YouTube and streaming platforms.
He has since featured in a range of streaming projects, including:
Sahore is generally cast in youthful, urban, middle-class roles, often as a student, romantic lead or sensitive young man. Reviewers of Flames and similar productions have noted his understated screen presence, which has helped these projects appeal to college and school-age viewers across India.
His work is part of a broader shift in the Indian entertainment industry during the late 2010s and early 2020s, in which streaming platforms and digital studios such as TVF, Dice Media, Netflix and Amazon Prime Video began producing youth-focused, serialised content outside the traditional Bollywood theatrical model. Performers like Sahore are associated with this generation of actors who built careers primarily through web originals before, or in parallel with, mainstream film roles.