Karna is perhaps one of the most complex characters that we have known from the Mahabharata. This play attempts to narrate his untold and often ignored story. It emphasizes Karna's magnaminity and his tragedy.
In the process it deals with existential dilemmas and of the choices we make. In the Great War Karna aligned himself with a man he knew to be ethically and morally wrong. Was it only because he had felt cheated and spurned or was there more to his story?