Two prices. Pay monthly. Cancel before the next series.
Generations roll over inside a season — IPL, BBL, PSL, internationals. No setup fees, no per-seat math, no decks. Just two lines.
500 generations is roughly one full IPL season for a 200K page.
Honest answer: don't switch the whole group on day one. Run Forge on one account for one match — wickets only. See if the reel goes out before highlights drop. If it does, you'll know what to do for the next match.
The WhatsApp group doesn't go away. The editors who were doing thumbnails at 8:14pm get to do the harder posts — the long-form analysis, the anniversary edits, the things that need a human eye. Forge takes the bursty stuff off their plate.
The 500 generations on Creator are season-rolling. Start mid-IPL, you're still good through the playoffs. If it doesn't click in 30 days, refund — keep what you made.
What you're already paying for. Just not in dollars.
- 4 editors on WhatsApp, ~3 hrs each per match-night
- Canva Pro for the design lead — $12.99/mo
- 30–40 min lag between wicket and reel-out
- Post-match recap goes up after highlights drop
- Brand voice drifts depending on which editor's awake
- Group chat fights about whose turn it is on a Tuesday
- Type the moment. 90s to three deliverables.
- Replaces Canva Pro for match-day output
- Reel out before highlights, every time
- Post-match thread auto-drafts at the final ball
- Locked brand voice — same caption tone every match
- Editors do the posts that actually need them
I built Forge for the WhatsApp group I used to be on every IPL final.
I ran a fan page for six years before this. Every IPL final my group had four editors trying to ship 30 posts in 4 hours. Half of them had day jobs the next morning.
The pricing here is what it costs us to run, plus a thin margin so we survive the off-season. ₹2 a generation on the backend. That's why Creator is $12 and not $29 — and why the model is the same on both tiers. We don't believe in punishing the smaller page.
If you run a page, DM me on the handle below. I read every one — usually between innings.