Blue Whale Suicide Challenge is a game that transforms suicide into a fascinating game for individuals who are miserable. As a 14-year-old boy leaps from a Mumbai rooftop, investigators think that the psychopathic network has moved to India.

Something ghastly has been building on the internet, and it appears to be the perfect storyline for a third-rate horror flick. A despondent adolescent stumbles into the Blue Whales social media community. The gang pushes him to commit suicide. It also promises to make his departure from this world more enjoyable by turning suicide into an exciting game. After registering, the child is assigned daily responsibilities for the following 50 days.

It includes self-injury, horror movie watching, rising up at unusual hours to do the work, and even carving a whale form on the arms. With each passing day, the task becomes more complicated. On the final (50th) day, the game administrator requests that the child commit suicide. Those who wish to withdraw on the final day are threatened with harm to their family members if they do not follow the game rules. There is no way out.

One of the tasks assigned is to carve out a whale form on the arm.

A 14-year-old kid in Andheri East, Mumbai, appears to have died as a result of the lethal game that started in Russia. Manpreet Singh, who fell off the roof of a seven-story building on Saturday, might be the network’s first casualty.

This psychotic game began four years ago in Russia on the social networking site VKontakte. Over 130 people have already died as a result of it in Russia. It is said to have resulted in the first suicide in 2015. Philipp Budeikin, a psychology student, claimed to be the creator of the game. Budeikin, who was expelled from his institution, stated that he was seeking to clear out society by encouraging individuals with little worth to commit suicide. According to some sources, the game’s mastermind, a postman named Ilya Sidorov, 26, was apprehended in Moscow, Russia. He used to push kids to injure themselves and, ultimately, commit themselves.

What is concerning is that, despite widespread knowledge that the lethal game began and expanded on VKontakte, a massively popular site in Russia, no safeguards were put in place to limit the network. A VKontakte account may be quickly created. When you log in and search for #bluewhale, you’ll see insane, dismal posts from young kids desperate to play the game and end their lives. Their profiles are as macabre as they come. There are images of self-injury, ghosts, and terrible illustrations of individuals bleeding and attempting suicide.