Updated On: 07 November, 2025 11:08 AM IST | Mumbai | Shruti Sampat
Huma Qureshi delivers a nuanced performance, portraying Rani as both fierce and flawed. While the pace occasionally feels rushed and subplots are overcrowded, the season stands out for its emotional depth and grounded storytelling.

Huma Qureshi as Rani Bharti; Vipin Sharma as PM Joshi
From the moment we step back into the world of Rani Bharti, portrayed with simmering intensity by Huma Qureshi, Maharani 4 makes clear that this isn’t simply another political drama—it is a story of grit, growth, and one woman’s fierce claim to power and purpose.
The series takes a bold leap from the familiar corridors of state politics into the vast, intimidating arena of national power. We see Rani shifting from being a regional leader to someone who must think, act, and survive in a bigger game. The writing plays it smart: it doesn’t treat her as an invincible icon but as someone haunted by doubt, mistakes, and moral ambiguity—even as she fights to define her own identity. The show doesn’t forget her roots: the unlettered homemaker who stepped up when she had to, whose vulnerabilities make her strength all the more sincere. That emotional undercurrent is where Maharani 4 finds its greatest power.