Peak Bengaluru Moment: Bengaluru Rapido Driver’s Anti-Rohan Message Breaks the Internet

Peak Bengaluru Moment: Bengaluru Rapido Driver’s Anti-Rohan Message Breaks the Internet

On an otherwise random Thursday, a tweet featuring a Bengaluru-based Rapido autorickshaw driver went viral. It's flooding Twitter timelines and triggering an unexpected social media wave. The image, posted by user @tahaactually, captured the back of an auto-handwritten sign that seemed to agree with thousands of people online.

The driver, dressed in a Rapido uniform and seated in the classic yellow-and-green Bengaluru auto, had displayed a bold message behind his seat that read: 

Shared in a tweet by user @tahaactually on May 29, the post quickly amassed over thousands of views with full-fledged social commentary on toxic exes and red-flag behavior, personified entirely by one name: Rohan

The last line of the board “Girlzzz try Tinder…” caught even more attention. Coming from an autorickshaw driver, the advice felt unexpected, almost out of place, and yet oddly fitting. While the rest of the message took aim at “Rohan,” this part nudged women to simply move on. It added a twist to the whole moment, turning a breakup warning into something more like a roadside pep talk.

But the question is, “ Who is Rohan?” 

The internet didn’t hold back. Comments flooded in with people collectively uniting under what one user dubbed the “Rohan Recovery Movement.” Others chimed in with lines like “Rohan is the synonym of red flag” and “Whatever Rohan did, I support the other side.”

The tweet became a digital confession booth, with users across India (and beyond) sharing their own Rohan stories, ranging from humorous to oddly specific. One reply read: “If I had a rupee for every time a girl said Rohan is a red flag, I could afford Starbucks coffee.”

The post didn’t just stay within the bounds of Twitter. It quickly spilled into Instagram, where users began sharing the image on stories, tagging their friends, exes, and, unfortunately, every Rohan they knew. One viral story by creator @mojorojo read:

"Please stop sending me this. Already akela hoon." It captures the collective mood of Rohan-named individuals suddenly caught in the crossfire.

The autorickshaw driver, whose identity remains unknown, is being celebrated online as an unexpected “heartbreak awareness ambassador.” Memes, Reels, and full-blown tweet threads, with many jokingly calling for a “Rohan proximity alert” on dating apps and ride-hailing services alike.

Known for its viral quirks, from “peak Bengaluru” traffic to café poetry, the city seems to have found its latest cultural export. And while there’s still no official word from any Rohans of the world, one thing is clear: Bengaluru autos always find a way to be part of the internet moment.

As the internet continues its love-hate affair with modern dating, this unexpected auto sign has turned into a city-wide inside joke, and perhaps, a cautionary tale.

Now in Bengaluru, watch out for potholes and Rohans.