Motoverse 2025 concludes with record energy as 40,000 riders unite in Goa

The 2025 Motoverse festival concluded in Goa on November 23, after three vibrant days celebrating riding, art, music, and the spirit of pure motorcycling. As the cultural heartbeat of Royal Enfield, Motoverse unites diverse communities of riders, creators, musicians, and explorers, showcasing that the brand builds not just motorcycles but a powerful global culture.

The 2025 edition of Motoverse came to a spectacular close in Goa on Sunday, November 23, after three electrifying days celebrating riding, art, music, and the raw spirit of motorcycling culture. Nearly 40,000 members of the global motorcycling community converged at the epic festival, transforming it into the biggest stage for moto-culture in the world.

Motoverse remains the beating heart of Royal Enfield—a vibrant fusion of craft, creativity, style, and the passionate people who define the motorcycling way of life. It stands as a testament to the brand’s philosophy: Royal Enfield doesn’t just build motorcycles; it builds a culture that moves.

This immersive and uniquely expressive festival brought together riders, creators, musicians, explorers, and free spirits, all syncing to the shared rhythm of Pure Motorcycling, energizing and inspiring the community and the future direction of the brand.

This year, the grounds in Vagator saw almost 40,000 people roll in from across the globe. The convergence came to life as riders and enthusiasts from diverse backgrounds immersed themselves in rides, races, hands-on workshops, and world-class performances. Built by the community, for the community, every race, showcase, and experience at Motoverse was led by the very people who live this culture every single day. Hanumankind and Diplo made an electrifying entrance into Motoverse, rolling in on a Bullet 650 and Himalayan 450, firing up the festival with music, machine, and unmistakable Royal Enfield spirit. 

A truly community-built festival, all activities were conceived, led, and hosted by members of different riding groups, subcultures, and creative communities. It was not an event made for “an audience”; it provided a space for people who live and shape motorcycling culture every day.

Key highlights from this year’s festival:

Products

  • Making its India debut was the Bullet 650, a motorcycle shaped by its multicultural heritage, carrying forward its storied legacy with more muscle and unmistakable character. The Bullet 650, now powered by Royal Enfield’s acclaimed 650cc parallel twin, promises a ride truer, smoother and more confident than ever.
  • Adjacent to the Flying Flea Cafe, was the all-new Flying Flea S6. Combining lightweight structure and refined design with off-road ability, the FF.S6 is an agile, versatile vehicle that pushes the boundaries of urban exploration. The scrambler-styled FF.S6 follows the same ethos as the original Flying Flea motorcycles.
  • Also taking the stage was the Himalayan Mana Black, officially launched in India after its global reveal at EICMA earlier this month. Cloaked in a deep Stealth Black with matte accents, the edition embodies minimalism and is purpose built for riders who treat every trail as an invitation, priced at ₹3,37,000 (ex-showroom, Chennai).
  • The new Meteor 350 Sundowner Orange, a vibrant special edition, was launched, celebrating the half-million-strong Meteor community. A true-blue cruiser with factory-fitted touring essentials, it will be available at ₹2,18,882 (ex-showroom, Chennai).

Experiences

  • Pure Sport Arena at MotoThrill, which once again delivered an electrifying display of action and skill.
  • The iconic Maut Ka Kuan (Well of Death) also made a powerful return with a double story set up this year, drawing crowds with its gravity-defying spectacle, while riders took to the track with the Royal Enfield FT450, pushing their limits in thrilling flat track sessions.

Music

  • The thrill extended beyond the track, with this year’s edition bringing to Goa Grammy-winning producer Diplo, a long time Royal Enfield rider who rode into the festival on the Himalayan 450 – and breakthrough rapper Hanumankind, another Royal Enfield aficionado who rode atop the new Bullet 650 to open this year’s Motoverse.
  • Other loved artists like Euphoria, Parvaaz, The Yellow Diary, MIDIval Punditz, x Kutle Khan x Karsh Kale, Thaikkudam Bridge and more were amongst the ones who owned the mainstage across the three days.

Sessions

  • At MotoReel, stories of perseverance, exploration, and human endurance took centre stage, as remarkable personalities such as Jonty Rhodes, Nick Sanders, Vanessa Ruck, Freddie Spencer, and the Monk & Warriors team with Major Jacob, Colonel Kashyap, Colonel Kaushalendra, Wing Commander Sathe, and more who shared their journeys and insights with an inspired audience.
  • Meanwhile, MotoVille buzzed with creative energy
  • The Art of Motorcycling arena showcased stunning artworks from 12 countries, after receiving over 51000 entries exploring the intersections of design, technology, and freedom on two wheels coming together under the theme of cine-verse.
  • This year also saw the second edition of Revv’ed Up Runway, a fashion presentation by Royal Enfield Apparel, unveiling a vintage-inspired collection that celebrated timeless moto style.