Rs.20,000 vs Rs.1,00,00,000 Per Month in Nepal

Support Me at https://www.buymemomo.com/realshub69 Video Editing Cohort https://frameshala.tech Social www.instagram.com/realshub69 www.facebook.com/realshub69 www.tiktok.com/@realshub69 BECOME A MEMBER    / @realshub69   Production Partner Highstation Productions www.instagram.com/highstationnp/ Bimbakaar www.instagram.com/bimbakaar/ Location Paradise by Le Pariso Cafe www.instagram.com/paradise_by_leparaiso_cafe/ Clothing Kamero Clothing https://kamero-nepal.blanxer.io/ www.instagram.com/ka.mero_nepal/ For your visa documents Sawrga Jane Bato   / swarga_jane_bato   Special Thanks Rohan Tripathi https://maps.app.goo.gl/uc21Rwa8D49Ea... Kiran Dhakal instagram.com/kirandhakal__ @kirandhakalhere Shailesh Giri www.instagram.com/shailesh.gr/ Sajib Lama Teju Magar Four people sit in the same café in urban Nepal. Same city. Same economy. Same country. Yet financially, they live in completely different realities. This video explores *4 levels of wealth in Nepal* by turning life into a video game. From a minimum wage waiter struggling to survive, to a middle class sales manager carrying family responsibilities, to a high earning corporate general manager, and finally to an elite entrepreneur operating with money, power, and influence. At each level, we enter their world and break down real monthly income, expenses, responsibilities, assets, liabilities, stress, and freedom. This is not motivation or hustle content. It is a realistic look at how money actually shapes life in Nepal. As income increases, survival turns into stability, then comfort, and eventually power. But life does not simply become easier. Social expectations rise. Pressure increases. The risks get bigger. And the rules of the game change quietly. The hardest truth this video explores is this In real life, **the lowest level is the hardest to play**. One mistake, one emergency, or one bad month can push someone into debt. And unlike video games, power ups do not come after leveling up. In real life, you need power ups like education, networks, stability, and access *before* you can level up. That is why only a few people ever escape the lowest levels, no matter how hard they work. This is a social commentary on wealth inequality in Nepal, middle class pressure, elite privilege, and the myth that hard work alone guarantees success. Same place. Same time. Same game. Different levels. Different rules. Watch till the end.