Mayanagari Full Movie - Chhota Bheem Amp- Krishna

Average Rating

Rate this game Thank you for submitting your review, your feedback is always appreciated

Explosive 3D Breakout action!

Publisher Alawar
Currently Unavailable

Game Description

Strike Ball 3 takes Breakout games to explosive heights with spectacular graphics and outrageous animation! Featuring levels in which a tank tries to fend off attacking aliens, a robot fires eye-popping laser bursts at swarming androids and the player can bring a windmill crashing to the ground with a well-timed air strike, Strike Ball 3 will knock off your socks. Superb level design, wildly fun bonuses and powerful new weapons complete the package!

Download size: 35 MB

Most Recent Reviews

Rate this game
No user reviews exist yet for this game. Play now and be the first to let us know what you think!

Average Rating:   ( Ratings)

Please wait a moment Please wait while the game starts Please wait while we remove the game

Mayanagari Full Movie - Chhota Bheem Amp- Krishna

Bheem and his Dholakpur gang—yes, including the ever-hungry Chutki and the perpetually confused Jaggu—somehow end up in Dwarka. Not modern Dwarka. Mythological, divine, actual Lord Krishna-era Dwarka. How? Don’t ask. Time travel in kids’ movies runs on vibes , not logic. Meanwhile, the villain Kirmada (Bheem’s arch-nemesis) teams up with a demon from Krishna’s past to create Mayanagari —a magical, shape-shifting city of illusions.

★★★★☆ (4/5) – One star less only because Jaggu deserved more screen time.

Let’s be real. If you’re above the age of 12, you probably rolled your eyes when someone put on Chhota Bheem & Krishna: Mayanagari . But then, something magical happens. You sit down. You watch. And by the time Lord Krishna pulls out his Sudarshan Chakra next to Bheem’s gada , you’re fully invested.

Here’s an interesting, slightly nostalgic, and fun review of Chhota Bheem & Krishna: Mayanagari – written from the perspective of a grown-up who secretly still enjoys it. Time Travel, Divine Crossovers, and a City of Illusions – Why This Movie Slaps Harder Than It Should