Introduction: The Man Who Juggled Four Startup Jobs

Imagine this: you wake up, check your email, and realize you’ve got code reviews pending for Playground AI, feature requests for Antimetal, design tweaks for Sync Labs, and debugging tickets for Lindy—all due by 9 AM. For most of us, that’s a nightmare. For Soham Parekh, it was just Tuesday. Since 2022, Parekh has quietly moonlighted as a software engineer at multiple Silicon Valley startups—often without any of them knowing. That revelation exploded on social media last week, sparking a swirl of stories, red-flag revelations in interviews, and, inevitably, a debate: genius or grifter?

The Viral Tweet That Started It All: Suhail Doshi’s Warning

The saga kicked off when Suhail Doshi, CEO of image-generation startup Playground AI, posted on X (formerly Twitter) on July 1, 2025:

“PSA: there’s a guy named Soham Parekh (in India) who works at 3–4 startups at the same time. He’s been preying on YC companies and more. Beware.”

Doshi says he first hired Parekh about a year ago, only to discover Parekh was also submitting code at Lindy, Antimetal, and Sync Labs. “I told him to stop lying/scamming people. He hasn’t stopped a year later,” Doshi wrote. The post garnered over 20 million views in 24 hours, igniting a chain reaction of founder confessions.

Founder Encounters: From Flo Crivello to Roy Lee

After Doshi’s warning, dozens of Silicon Valley CEOs weighed in:

Interview Red Flags: Top Talent or Too Good to Be True?

Multiple founders described remarkably consistent patterns in Parekh’s application and interview process:

  1. Discrepant Location Claims
    • Reworkd founding engineer Rohan Pandey pegged Parekh’s performance in coding interviews as top-three quality—yet an IP logger on a Zoom call proved Parekh dialed in from India, despite claiming U.S. residency.
  2. Résumé Inconsistencies
    • Doshi uncovered that Parekh’s resume—which boasted a master’s from Georgia Tech—didn’t always align with his GitHub contributions or employment dates.
  3. Remote-Only Demands
    • Agency’s Silverman and Cluely’s Lee both flagged Parekh’s insistence on entirely remote work as unusual, especially for senior or founding-engineer roles.
  4. Rescheduled Interviews & Vanishing Acts
    • Silverman logged at least five reschedules from Parekh before deciding the delay wasn’t worth the risk.

Despite these red flags, Parekh’s raw technical ability made it easy for founders to overlook inconsistencies—until the X post made everyone check their records.

Parekh’s Perspective: 140 Hours a Week, Zero Regrets?

On July 3, 2025, Parekh appeared on the Technology Business Programming Network (TBPN) podcast with hosts John Coogan and Jordi Hays to share his side:

What’s Next? From Viral Notoriety to Potential Seed Round

In true Silicon Valley fashion, Parekh tried to parlay his newfound fame into another gig. He announced—then quickly deleted—a role at Darwin Studios, an AI video remixing startup led by founder and CEO Sanjit Juneja, who later praised Parekh as “incredibly talented.” Both Juneja and Parekh scrubbed the announcement within hours, but not before screenshots spread across LinkedIn and X.

Given the precedent—Cluely raised $15 million in seed funding off its provocative marketing tactics—Parekh might secure investors intrigued by his audacity as much as his code. But would VCs bet on someone dubbed “serial moonlighter”?

Conclusion: Genius Hacker or Grifter of the Gig Economy?

Soham Parekh’s story sits at the intersection of raw technical prowess, Silicon Valley hustle culture, and the risks of remote hiring. It forces us to ask:

Whether Parekh emerges as a cautionary tale or a case study in relentless self-improvement, one thing’s certain: his four-job caper has exposed vulnerabilities in the high-stakes world of startup recruiting—and given every founder a reason to double-check their onboarding process.