
A man was hit and flung into a drain by a speeding Mahindra Thar SUV in Noida Sector 53—and it was all caught on camera. The Road Rage in Noida incident happened after a fight that started on Instagram spiraled into full-blown street violence. The driver, still at large, is being chased by police.
When Social Media Beef Spills Into the Streets
According to Noida police, the two parties involved knew each other and had been fighting online. The argument, fueled by social media jabs, escalated in real life near Sector 24. What started with comments on Instagram turned into a face-off, then a crime scene.

This isn’t just about two angry young men. It’s about how digital aggression is bleeding into real life, where one tap on “Send” becomes a trigger for violence. For regular folks, it means we’re all walking a little more carefully, knowing that road rage today isn’t just about honks—it’s about hit-and-runs fueled by ego.
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Eyewitnesses Say It Was Deliberate
People at the scene say the SUV driver didn’t just lose control—he pressed the pedal on purpose. The victim was thrown into a roadside drain, bleeding and unconscious, as the SUV sped off.
A viral video of the attack shows just how fast words can become weapons. Within seconds, a street turned into a war zone. The footage has sparked outrage and fear online. It’s also reignited questions about how much unchecked rage we’re carrying around these days—especially behind the wheel.
Watch the video here https://x.com/AdityaRajKaul/status/1929804903783805360
Police Crack Down, Netizens Call for More
Police have filed charges for rash driving, criminal intimidation, and causing hurt. A special investigation team is now on the lookout for the driver. “We’ve registered a case and teams are working to arrest the accused,” said ADCP Noida Sumit Kumar Shukla.
But many online say that’s not enough. With every new case like this, there’s a louder cry for stricter road laws and better surveillance. Public roads shouldn’t feel like battlegrounds, especially not over Instagram fights.
So yes, we scroll, we fight, we swipe. But let’s not forget—every online war has the potential to step off the screen. And the next headline? It could be about you.