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Channel audit · @BR_ADARSH33

@BR_ADARSH33 Channel Audit: 2,110 Subs, 473 Videos, What's Going On

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BR_ADARSH33 sits at 2,110 subscribers with 473 uploaded videos and roughly 1.04 million lifetime views — that works out to about 2,200 views per video averaged over the channel's life, but a sub-per-video ratio of just 4.5. The recent uploads show 0 views, which is the headline anomaly here.

Channel data · captured Jun 15, 2026

Handle
@BR_ADARSH33
Subscribers
2,110
Videos
473
Country
India

Hello 👋 ..! Guys😗 Uid:2168776179 Device📲: Redmi note 13 pro Edit:capcut☠️.+ 3 more apps HUD: ? ⚡️🗿 Keep supporting guy❤️

2,110 subs in the Indian mobile gaming space is mid-tier hobbyist territory. For context — BGMI and Free Fire creators routinely cross 10K within their first 100 uploads if the channel finds its lane, and the breakout ones hit 100K inside 18 months. BR_ADARSH33 has been grinding through 473 uploads to land at 2,110 subs, which works out to roughly 4.5 subscribers earned per video published. That's the number that jumped out at me first. The average creator in this niche who survives past video 100 is usually pulling 30-50 subs per video by that point, so something in the funnel is leaking hard.

The 473-video count is honestly impressive in a stubborn sort of way. Most creators quit between video 30 and 100. Pushing through to nearly 500 uploads means this person has shown up over and over, which is the part of the job 95% of YouTubers don't do. But here's where the data gets uncomfortable: 473 videos divided into 1.04M lifetime views averages out to about 2,200 views per video — and that average is almost certainly being pulled up by 5-10 outliers while the long tail sits at a few hundred views each. From outside I can't see which specific uploads carried the channel, but the shape is classic: a handful of accidental hits and a long graveyard of videos the algorithm never picked up.

The description gives away the niche even though the title slot is empty on the latest uploads. The UID number (2168776179), the Redmi Note 13 Pro called out as the playing device, the HUD reference with the gun emoji, and CapCut listed as the editor — that's a near-certain BGMI / Battlegrounds Mobile India content creator setup, possibly Free Fire. Indian mobile gaming is one of the most crowded niches on YouTube right now, with thousands of small creators chasing the same Tier-Royale clips and montage formats. The bio itself is also a missed slot. It currently reads as a personal greeting and equipment list, when it could be doing keyword work telling YouTube exactly what game and format live on the channel.

The most concerning data point: the three most recent long-form uploads all show 0 views and the titles are blank in the public data I'm reading. That's either a scrape-timing issue — the uploads went live in the last hour and haven't accumulated views yet — or these are uploads that briefly published before metadata was filled in. If they're freshly public, fine, the count will move. If they've been up for more than a few hours with 0 views and no title visible, that's a more serious problem: the algorithm needs a title and thumbnail to surface a video at all. An untitled upload basically won't get distributed. Worth checking inside Studio whether these were accidentally pushed live before the upload flow finished.

If I were sitting next to this creator over coffee and they asked me what to do next, the honest answer wouldn't be "upload more." They've uploaded 473 times. The conversion problem isn't volume — it's that the videos that exist aren't pulling new viewers in. The lever I'd actually pull is going through the top 10 historical videos by view count, finding what specifically about those topics or thumbnails worked, and making the next 10 uploads variations on whatever that pattern was. Mobile gaming channels usually break out from one specific format — a particular tournament breakdown, a signature gun loadout, or a regional rivalry. Without retention curves or CTR data I can't tell you which format theirs is, but that data is sitting inside YouTube Studio right now and it's the single most useful afternoon a 2K-sub channel can spend.

Common questions

How many subscribers does @BR_ADARSH33 have right now?

As of June 2026, @BR_ADARSH33 has 2,110 subscribers on YouTube. That's been built across 473 uploaded videos and roughly 1.04 million lifetime channel views. The math works out to about 4.5 subscribers gained per video published, which is on the low end for a mobile gaming creator with that much output. For context, BGMI and Free Fire creators who break through usually pull 20-50 subs per video by their 100th upload — so 2,110 across 473 videos suggests the channel hasn't yet locked onto the format that converts watchers into subscribers.

What niche or game is @BR_ADARSH33's channel actually in?

The channel description doesn't say outright, but the signals point hard to Indian mobile gaming — specifically BGMI (Battlegrounds Mobile India) or possibly Free Fire. The giveaways: a UID number (2168776179) listed in the bio, a Redmi Note 13 Pro called out as the playing device, CapCut named as the editor, and a HUD reference with a gun emoji. That combination is almost exclusively used by mobile shooter creators in India. The bio doesn't confirm the game by name, which is itself a missed move for both setting viewer expectations and helping YouTube understand what the channel is actually about.

How often does @BR_ADARSH33 upload to YouTube?

The lifetime numbers tell us this creator uploads a lot — 473 videos total. Without exact upload date stamps I can't compute their current cadence precisely, but a 473-video back catalog means somewhere between two and four uploads per week sustained over a couple of years is plausible. The three most recent uploads are all long-form, which is a shift if the channel was previously Shorts-heavy. What I can say with certainty: this isn't a consistency problem. Whatever is blocking growth here, it isn't lack of effort or upload volume — it's a conversion and discoverability issue.

Why are @BR_ADARSH33's three most recent uploads showing 0 views?

Honestly, this could be two things. One — the uploads went live very recently and haven't accumulated views yet, in which case the number will move within hours. Two — the recent uploads don't have titles visible in the public data, which suggests they may have been published before metadata was added. YouTube needs a title and thumbnail to push a video into the algorithm at all. An untitled upload basically won't get surfaced. Worth checking inside YouTube Studio whether these were accidentally published in a draft state and need a title, thumbnail, and description filled in before they have a real chance.

What can other mobile gaming creators learn from this channel?

The biggest lesson hiding in @BR_ADARSH33's data is that volume alone doesn't compound. They've published 473 videos and earned 2,110 subscribers — roughly one subscriber for every 220 video views. The breakout BGMI and Free Fire channels generally find one specific format — a recurring tournament breakdown, a signature trick montage, a regional rivalry series — and ride it hard. Uploading constantly without pattern-matching to what actually converted in the back catalog means the algorithm never learns what to recommend the channel for. The fix is going back through historical top performers and copying that pattern forward, not pushing more uploads of the same scattered mix.

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Run a free YouTube channel audit on your own channel

Paste your channel handle and get a free read of the bottleneck holding back your Shorts, uploads, or channel positioning. No signup and no card for the first read.