The Story of Two 16-Year-Old Creators Building India’s Most Honest Candy Brand

In a world where teenagers are often told to focus only on school, two 16-year-olds decided to focus on something bigger—a dream. What started as creativity, friendship, and curiosity turned into a growing candy brand built by two young minds refusing to wait for adulthood to chase ambition.

This is the story of Harry Sucks (Zishaan Raza)—now known simply as Harry—and Steve Sucks (Naman Sahu), who now goes by Steve. Together, they are building Cravory, a fresh, unapologetic candy brand that is slowly making its place in India.

Harry’s journey began far from business. As a young creator on Instagram, he spent his time posting cover songs, experimenting with his voice, and connecting with people online. Over time, his consistency built him a small but strong audience of 3,000 followers—not a viral explosion, but a meaningful following that trusted him. And for Harry, that was enough to try something bold.

He released his first merch drop, a project many teenagers dream of but rarely execute. To his surprise, the entire stock sold out—not instantly, but gradually—as his followers supported him. The result was a 3X return on his investment, giving him his first real taste of entrepreneurship. It wasn’t the money that changed him; it was the realization that he could create something with his own hands and make people care about it.

During this time, Harry was heavily inspired by YouTuber Ryan Trahan, whose fun, creative approach to candy caught Harry’s attention. Watching Trahan experiment with unique sweets unavailable in India, Harry started to think: “Why don’t we have candy like this here?” What seemed like a simple thought slowly turned into a serious idea.

But ideas grow best with the right people. Harry shared his vision with his close friend Steve, who shared the same energy, creativity, and hunger to build something at a young age. They were two teenagers with no industry background, no funding, and no big team—just a shared belief that they could create something new.

Together, they named their brand Cravory—a space where candy didn’t have to pretend to be healthy, perfect, or guilt-free. Their philosophy was simple yet refreshing: Candy was never meant to be healthy. Candy is meant to be fun.

Harry and Steve wanted Cravory to represent authenticity, not perfection. Instead of following the trend of “healthy” candy, they embraced the joy, sweetness, and childhood chaos that candy has always represented.

Their first product, the Swiss Roll Gummy, didn’t go viral and wasn’t an instant sensation—but it got people curious. Orders came in slowly but consistently, enough to encourage the young founders to keep improving and experimenting. Customers appreciated the originality, and Cravory began developing a small but genuine audience.

Today, Cravory is still in its early stages, but it’s slowly finding its place. A small but steady stream of customers is discovering the brand, and every week teaches Harry and Steve something new about packaging, marketing, and how to actually run a business. Cravory isn’t big yet—it’s simply a young brand with honest effort behind it, built by two 16-year-olds who decided to start instead of waiting.

But Cravory is only one part of Harry’s journey.

Coming from a family with 35 years of experience in the jewellery business, Harry is now also working with his father on a new brand called Habiba. This project blends decades of craftsmanship with Harry’s fresh, modern approach to branding and creativity. Habiba is being launched on a grand scale, and Harry is learning first-hand how a professional business operates—knowledge that will help him in both Cravory and all future ventures.

And there is more ahead. Harry, who started with Instagram cover songs, is now working on his own original music, planned for release in 2026. The young creator who once sang into his phone is now preparing to step into the music world with purpose and identity.

The story of Harry and Steve isn’t about overnight success. It’s about small steps, steady growth, and fearless beginnings. It’s about two 16-year-olds who believed they didn’t need to be older to build something meaningful. It’s about turning curiosity into a vision, and vision into early progress. And it’s a reminder to every young creator:

You don’t have to wait to start. You don’t have to be older to try. And you don’t need permission to build your dream.

Cravory is growing. Habiba is launching. Harry’s music is coming. For two 16-year-olds who dared to take the first step, this is only the beginning.