Ab Hoga Hisaab Season 2 Review: ★★★☆☆ (3/5)
Bobby Manocha returns with a vengeance, but stretched-out storytelling and unnecessary subplots hold the series back. Shaheer Sheikh delivers a strong performance, but the Amazon MX Player crime drama struggles with pacing and uneven writing. Sanjay Kapoor also impress, but the crime drama loses momentum with unnecessary detours.
Rating: ★★★☆☆ (3/5)
Platform: Amazon MX Player
Language: Hindi/Punjabi
Cast: Shaheer Sheikh, Sanjay Kapoor, Mouni Roy, Avinash Mishra, Nimrit Kaur Ahluwalia
Season: 2
If you stuck with Ab Hoga Hisaab through its first season and found the premise compelling enough to come back, Season 2 gives you something real to hold on to — mainly Shaheer Sheikh’s transformation as Bobby Manocha.
In Season 1, Bobby was a man defined by grief, guilt, and emotional fragility. A husband and brother trying to make sense of what happened to his family after they got entangled in a dangerous network of illegal immigration and organ trafficking. He was reactive, struggling, never quite in control. Season 2 brings him back changed. Harder, more focused, carrying a quiet, burning fury that he now knows how to aim. Watching that shift across episodes is genuinely satisfying and stands as the series’ most compelling element throughout.
Shaheer Sheikh does complete justice to the role. This is a different kind of performance from what fans of his earlier television work might expect — less romantic intensity, more contained determination — and he handles the transition with real conviction. Bobby in Season 2 is someone you would not want to be on the wrong side of, and Shaheer makes you believe that without ever needing to overdo it.
Sanjay Kapoor as Goldy Sekhon continues to work well as the series’ central antagonist. He brings a cold, calculating menace to the role that keeps you genuinely invested in whether Bobby will finally reach him. Avinash Mishra as Bunty Manocha is a pleasant surprise — fresh, committed, and unapologetic in exactly the ways the character requires. Aasheema Vardaan as Lovely is similarly effective, bringing an energy that the show genuinely needed.
Mouni Roy as Kamna is decent but inconsistent. Her character is established as intelligent and perceptive, which makes it harder to buy certain moments where she fails to connect obvious dots. The inconsistency in her character’s intelligence undermines some of the dramatic impact the show is clearly going for.
The Bobby-Kamna romantic track is the subplot that lands least convincingly. The two spend most of the season in conflict, and then a sudden shift toward attraction arrives without enough emotional groundwork to justify it. It feels more like a scripted detour than a natural development, and the series would likely have been stronger without it.
Nimrit Kaur Ahluwalia as Gazal and Harman Singha as Inspector Dosanjh both do their best with the material available, but their characters ultimately do not add much to the central story. They feel like the show filling space rather than serving the narrative.
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And that, ultimately, is the series’ most persistent problem. The core subject — illegal immigration, organ trafficking, family destroyed by a criminal network — is genuinely interesting and socially relevant. But the story keeps getting stretched with subplots that dilute the tension rather than building it. A tightly edited single season could have made this a far more gripping watch.
If crime dramas with socially relevant themes appeal to you, Ab Hoga Hisaab Season 2 is watchable. Shaheer Sheikh makes it worth your time. The writing just does not always do him justice.
Similar Read: Ab Hoga Hisaab Review
Ab Hoga Hisaab Season 2 is now streaming on Amazon MX Player.

