You could tell it wasn’t a booth by what people were doing in it. Nobody was standing in a queue to watch a screen. They were moving — shooting, reframing, walking off to catch something across the festival and coming back with it.

That was the point of Pocket Playground, DJI’s three-day activation at All You Can Fest Mumbai. The Osmo Pocket 4 had just landed in India, and instead of introducing it from a stage, DJI dropped it into the middle of the country’s biggest homegrown culture festival and let creators run.

AYC is the right kind of chaos for this. Fashion, music, art, food, community — all of it happening at once, none of it staged for a camera. Which is exactly what a pocket creator tool is built for: the unplanned frame, the thing you didn’t know you’d shoot until it happened in front of you. A studio can’t fake that. A festival hands it to you for free.

So the “demo” wasn’t a demo. A creator would pick up the Pocket 4, disappear into the crowd, and come back with footage that looked like them — their eye, their subject, their edit — not a brand’s reel. Multiply that across three days and the activation stopped being about DJI talking and started being about creators showing.

That’s the difference the whole thing hinged on. Made for creators is something a company says. Proven by creators is something a room does. Pocket Playground was engineered so the second one could actually happen — in public, unscripted, in the hands of people with no reason to be generous about it.

Mumbai was the first room. It won’t be the last: DJI is rolling the same hands-on, creator-first approach into more of India’s metro markets. If you missed this one, there’s a decent chance the playground shows up in your city next.

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