HMD Launches Vibe 2 5G with Indian AI Chatbot Indus
نظرة سريعة
- Finnish phone maker HMD has launched its Vibe 2 5G smartphone, featuring Indian AI company Sarvam's Indus chatbot preloaded.
- The app supports 22 Indic languages and mid-sentence code-switching, aiming to gauge market appetite for India-focused AI tools.
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HMD, a Finnish phone maker, has launched its first smartphone, the Vibe 2 5G, which comes preloaded with the Indus chatbot from Indian AI company Sarvam. This partnership aims to test the market for an India-focused AI chatbot.
Finnish phone maker HMD today launched its first smartphone, called the Vibe 2 5G, which comes preloaded with Indian AI company Sarvam’s chatbot Indus.
Both companies had first announced the partnership during the India AI summit held in New Delhi in February.
The Indus app is powered by Sarvam’s locally trained 105-billion-parameter model — a measure of the AI’s scale and sophistication — and launched at the AI summit.
The app supports 22 Indic languages and mid-sentence code-switching (the ability to fluidly mix languages mid-conversation, like switching between Hindi and English), which helps the assistant better understand the context of a query.
Currently, the application doesn’t support offline usage, and it doesn’t have any integrated feature with the device to invoke the AI assistant through a shortcut.
The partnership is a potential testing ground for both companies to gauge the appetite for an India-focused chatbot.
“With this partnership, the first thing we want to do is get the Indus app to consumers,” said Ravi Kunwar, HMD’s CEO and Vice President for India and APAC, in an interview with TechCrunch.
“Once they start using it, we will move to phase two to focus on driving more traction and stickiness. Right now, by pre-loading the app, we want to be more accessible to users,” he said.
The Vibe 2 5G is a mid-range Android phone with a 6,000mAh battery and a price tag of ₹10,999($114).
Kunwar added the devices in the Vibe series of smartphones will also get the chatbot, and the company is also expected to launch a feature phone with Sarvam AI integration in the coming months.
That feature phone integration may ultimately prove more significant for both companies.
HMD held a 4% share of India’s feature phone market in 2025, but its smartphone share was negligible — the company doesn’t even appear in the top 15, according to analyst firm IDC.
While it’s early days for Indus, the download numbers reflect that.
Nearly three months after its launch, the app has been downloaded just over 293,000 times in India across platforms, according to Appfigures.
By comparison, ChatGPT was downloaded 43.9 million times in the country.
It’s a big gap, but the strategy behind the HMD deal may matter more than the early numbers.
Bundling a regional AI assistant with affordable hardware — particularly feature phones — is one of the more direct distribution plays available in a market as large and linguistically diverse as India, where English-language AI tools have limited reach.
For investors and operators watching how AI adoption gets seeded in emerging markets, this partnership is worth tracking.
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HMD will launch a feature phone with Sarvam AI integration in the coming months.
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أسئلة مفتوحة
- Will the Indus app gain significant traction and stickiness beyond the initial pre-loading?
- How will the feature phone integration with Sarvam AI perform in the Indian market?
- What is the long-term strategy for HMD and Sarvam in developing and distributing AI-powered devices in India?
- What are the specific capabilities and limitations of the Indus chatbot in real-world usage across 22 Indic languages?






