Near outer Delhi lies the village of Kanjhawala, which suddenly becomes the headlines in newspapers. The reason behind this is a six-year-old boy known as Brenu. Whenever Brenu stares intently at a spoon or a knife, he miraculously turns it around in an extraordinary manner. If he places his hands on a person with minor illnesses, they miraculously recover. Brenu AKA Buddhhipalat ability to lift objects with his power became a topic of discussion among people, and his name starts appearing in newspapers.
However, one day, due to his mental powers, when the landlord’s son drowned in water, Brenu faced punishment. The landlord continued to beat him with a whip until he lost consciousness. In this incident, Brenu’s mother also died, and Brenu was locked in a wooden cage, left hungry and thirsty to die. However, that same night, a thief named Khunkhar, whose name means ruthless, escaped with him.
The death of Brenu’s mother and Khunkhar’s kindness turned him into a mastermind. His sole purpose was to steal money for his ruthless uncle. Anyone who came in between him and his goal was trapped in his mental web and forced to commit suicide.
To the extent that he almost forced even a nuclear scientist to commit suicide several times. Buddhhipalat, one of the villains of Parmanu, had clashed with him in the Buddhhipalat comics. He trapped Parmanu in his web and left. Later, he returned in Takkar comics, where he forced superheroes into his mental trap and compelled them to confront Parmanu. Among all of Parmanu’s enemies, Buddhhipalat is the youngest and most dangerous in age because he never needs any weapons; he is a weapon himself. Sometimes even Parmanu is unaware of him, and he gets the job done by trapping him in his mental web.
Only two comics of Buddhhipalat have been released.
Buddhhipalat
The comic begins with an attempt by Parmanu to commit suicide, where he is grappling with the guilt of allegedly murdering his Professor uncle. In despair, he throws his belt and jumps off the Qutub Minar. However, at the nick of time, Pralyanka intervenes and saves him, revealing the truth that his uncle is alive. When the truth unfolds, not only is Parmanu shocked but also all the readers of the comic, as they realize that someone had manipulated Parmanu’s mind to drive him to suicide. The perpetrator turns out to be a fifteen-year-old boy named Buddhhipalat.
Through the comic, we learn about the bitter life of Buddhhipalat, how he gained powers, lost his mother, and was rescued by a thief he refers to as Kukhankar Chacha. Now, his sole aim is to please his uncle by using his mental powers to rob banks.
Buddhhipalat is portrayed ruthlessly in the comic, eliminating anyone who comes in his way of committing crimes, even those who trusted him. However, in the end, Parmanu reaches him, but Buddhhipalat manages to escape.
Takkar
In the “Takkar Comics,” Buddhhipalat makes a comeback, and the comic features a showdown between the two superheroes of Raj Comics, Dakhmaandharak Yoddha and Wonderman Parmanu. It becomes evident that both of them are being manipulated by Buddhhipalat, who has a master plan.
As the comic begins, when Parmanu is seen committing a crime, all the readers immediately suspect Buddhhipalat’s return. However, Pralayanka once again manages to save Parmanu, foiling Buddhhipalat’s plan, which involved an operation to obtain a bomb. However, luck favors Budhwipalt, and he encounters a warrior who disrupts his plan. Buddhhipalat, using his powers, manipulates even the mind of the innocent child to make him fight like a warrior, making him clash with Parmanu.
A new villain is introduced in the story, a servant of the old enemy Kaaldev, who hides in the shadows and manipulates Yoddha’s mind with dark particles. This may be the reason why Buddhhipalat had taken control of his mind. The narrative seems intentionally intricate, perhaps to address the question in readers’ minds about how a powerful deity like Yoddha could be enslaved by a mere human.