The Karnataka government has decided to throw its weight behind a future that is not just ambitious but audacious. Six point one seven acres of land at Hessarghatta, just outside Bengaluru, have been sanctioned for what will be called “Quantum City” or Q-City. This is not a token project. It is pitched as a hub with state-of-the-art laboratories, incubation spaces for startups, production clusters for quantum hardware and processors, and the kind of academic–industry partnerships that governments love to talk about but rarely manage to execute. Here, however, the intent seems heavier than rhetoric.