Gram Chikitsalay Season 2:
The trailer for Gram Chikitsalay Season 2 is out, and it doesn’t waste time pretending things have changed too much. It just drops you straight back into Bhathkandi, that same village, same PHC, same slow-burning chaos… and honestly, it feels kind of familiar in a good way.
The show is returning on June 23, 2026, streaming globally on Amazon Prime Video India, and this time it looks like things are only getting more complicated for Dr. Prabhat.
Dr. Prabhat is still fighting the system (and losing sleep over it)
Amol Parashar is back as Dr. Prabhat, and the trailer makes it pretty clear—he’s still stuck in the same loop of paperwork, pressure, and trying to fix a system that doesn’t really want fixing.
There’s something very grounded about the way his struggle is shown. It’s not loud or dramatic. It’s more like constant small problems stacking up. One after another. And that feels very real.
Same village, but the stakes feel a bit heavier now
The PHC is still neglected, the bureaucracy still moves at its own lazy pace, and the village politics? Yeah, still very much alive.
But Season 2 seems like it’s adding a bit more tension under everything. Like things are not just “bad” anymore—they’re starting to reach a breaking point.
And that’s where the trailer quietly pulls you in.
Familiar faces, new pressure
We also see familiar characters again, including Vinay Pathak and Akansha Ranjan Kapoor, both slipping back into their roles like no time has passed.
But the interesting twist this time is the entry of Dinesh Lal Yadav (Nirahua) as Babu Saheb. He shows up like a new force in the system—less friendly, more political, and clearly someone who’s going to shake things up in Bhathkandi.
TVF doing what TVF does
The tone still feels very much in line with what The Viral Fever usually does best—small stories, simple setups, but with a lot of truth tucked underneath.
Nothing feels over-designed. The humor is still there, but it’s not forced. And the drama doesn’t try to shout at you. It just sits there, slowly building.
Final thought
The trailer doesn’t try to reinvent the show. It doesn’t need to.
It just says—“yeah, we’re back, same place, same problems… but now things are a bit more serious.”
And somehow, that’s enough to make you want to watch what happens next.

