After months of curiosity, speculation, and viral buzz, Deepinder Goyal’s experimental wearable ‘Temple’ has officially entered early access, with the first 100 units now ready for select users. The limited rollout marks the first real step toward taking the much-talked-about device beyond concept and into the hands of early adopters.
The company has opened applications for users to try the device, positioning the rollout as an invite-led, controlled release rather than a mass-market launch. This exclusivity adds to the intrigue around Temple, which has remained one of the most closely watched and least understood consumer tech projects in India.
Temple first caught public attention when Goyal was spotted wearing a small device on the side of his head, sparking widespread online speculation. What followed was a carefully orchestrated build-up: cryptic posts, bold claims, and a waitlist that quickly drew global curiosity.
At its core, Temple is not a typical wearable. Unlike smartwatches that track steps or heart rate, the device is designed to monitor brain-related metrics, specifically cerebral blood flow, in real time.
Often described as a “brain performance tracker,” the device aims to measure how blood flows through the brain, data that could potentially unlock insights into focus, fatigue, stress, and even ageing.
The startup has already raised $50+ million in funding from a network of founder friends and early backers, reflecting strong belief in the long-term potential of the idea. The ambition is equally bold: to build a device that measures something no mainstream wearable currently does, making it less of a fitness tracker and more of a cognitive and longevity-focused product.
The rollout of just 100 units suggests Temple is still in a testing and learning phase, where user feedback will likely shape the product’s next iteration. It also reflects a broader trend in deep-tech startups launching early, iterating fast, and building in public.
Hello world. The first 100 Temples are ready to ship. We’re now inviting athletes, scientists, founders, doctors, creators, and individuals who care deeply about their physical and cognitive health to be the founding users of Temple.
Apply for early access at… pic.twitter.com/aljDp0iKVi
— Deepinder Goyal (@deepigoyal) May 5, 2026






