Quick Overview:
- Royal Enfield hosted its first-ever ‘HunterHood’ cultural event in Mumbai and Delhi
- Featured launch of the 2025 Hunter 350 with new colours and updated features
- Over 5,000 attendees celebrated street art, music, skateboarding, and motorcycles
Street style, sizzling beats, slick skateboards—and a dash of 350cc rebellion. That’s what Royal Enfield’s debut edition of HunterHood served up in Mumbai and Delhi last weekend. No ballrooms, no speeches—just the raw spirit of the streets taking over, and at the centre of it all was the updated 2025 Hunter 350.

Hunterhood highlights
Inspired by “the coolest neighbourhoods of the world,” the refreshed Hunter 350 comes in three new colourways and flaunts subtle feature upgrades. Still lightweight, still agile, and still oozing style, the Hunter stays true to its formula but gets a fresher vibe to match its audience. Competitors like the Jawa 42 and Honda CB350RS might have their charm, but the Hunter continues to bank on its no-nonsense attitude and tight urban focus.





But the event wasn’t just about chrome and horsepower. It was a melting pot of subcultures—graffiti artists, rappers, breakdancers, BMX stunt riders, and skaters all showed up, showed out, and turned up the heat. From Dino James dropping bars to OG Shez lighting up the mic, the vibe was more music fest than motor show. Royal Enfield wasn’t just marketing a motorcycle—they were co-signing a movement.
In true street culture fashion, attendees could shop from indie apparel labels, feast on local grub, or vibe with cyphers that popped up spontaneously. All told, over 5,000 people across both cities got a taste of the scene—and left with more than just selfies.
With this event, Royal Enfield flexed its ability to blur the lines between motorcycling and lifestyle. And the Hunter? It isn’t just a commuter anymore—it’s a statement.
Final Thoughts:
If bikes were sneakers, the Hunter 350 just dropped its collab with street culture—and the fit is fire. Whether you’re a rider, rapper, skater or sneakerhead, this one made it loud and clear: cool doesn’t come from chrome, it comes from the culture.