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Channel audit · @BellasComicChronicles

@BellasComicChronicles Channel Audit: 22.9K Subs, 469 Videos Analyzed

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@BellasComicChronicles sits at 22,900 subscribers across 469 uploads — roughly 49 subs earned per video published, with 3.52M lifetime views averaging around 7,500 per upload. The channel runs a daily long-form cadence in the comic and story-narration niche, with zero Shorts in the last 30 uploads.

Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026

Handle
@BellasComicChronicles
Subscribers
22,900
Videos
469
Country
United States

Thank you all for your support! If you're interested in stories, comics, or novels, please consider subscribing to my account. I update with exciting content daily, offering you a unique reading experience!

The numbers that jump out first: 469 videos to get to 22,900 subs is a tough ratio. That's roughly one subscriber earned for every twenty videos published, which is well below what most channels in the long-form narration space would consider healthy. For context, channels in the comic and story-narration niche that are growing well tend to land closer to one sub per five videos or better. So either Bella's content is in an audience-saturation phase within a tight niche, or the catalog has a long tail of older videos that aren't pulling their weight anymore.

The lifetime view math: 3.52M views across 469 videos puts the per-video average at about 7,515 views. That's a respectable number for a niche channel, but when you stack it against daily output, the per-day yield gets thin. Thirty uploads in the last thirty days means the channel is fully committed to a daily release schedule, all long-form, zero Shorts in the recent window. That's a meaningful choice — a lot of comic-narration channels in 2026 are using Shorts as a top-of-funnel discovery layer, and going pure long-form is the harder path right now.

I should flag something honestly: the live scrape of recent upload titles and view counts came back blank and zeroed out. That's almost certainly a scraping artifact (API or rate-limit) rather than a reflection of the actual videos. So I can't tell you which specific upload from this past week popped or flopped. What I can say from the channel description and the catalog size is that this is a comic, novel, and story-narration channel updating daily — the description itself says "I update with exciting content daily, offering you a unique reading experience" — and that volume-first approach matches what you see from a handful of other narration channels in the same lane.

About the niche itself: comic narration on YouTube splits roughly into three lanes — webcomic readings (lots of romance and revenge-plot manhwa adaptations), original-novel narrations, and what people sometimes call "story-time" channels that adapt Reddit or written fiction. Bella's positioning seems to sit in lanes one and two based on the description. The 22.9K subscriber tier in this space is the awkward middle — past the cold-start phase, not yet at the 100K threshold where the algorithm starts treating you as a niche authority. The honest read is that this is the zone where most channels either crack a repeatable thumbnail and title formula and double in twelve months, or plateau for years on the same number.

A few gaps that are diagnosable from outside data alone. First, the absence of Shorts is the loudest signal. For a story-narration channel, a 30-60 second hook teasing the wildest moment of a longer video is basically free distribution in 2026 — pulling a single dramatic line from a comic narration and posting it as a Short has historically been a strong feeder for long-form channels in this niche. Second, with 469 videos in the catalog, there's almost certainly a back-catalog opportunity worth exploring — finding the three or four uploads with the strongest CTR or watch time and producing sequels or remixes is usually higher ROI than the 470th daily new upload. Third, and this one I can only ask rather than answer from outside: are viewers finishing these narrations or dropping off in the first minute? That single retention number would tell you whether daily volume is helping or quietly hurting.

One forward-looking thing worth thinking about. The comic-narration space got noticeably more competitive in late 2025 and into 2026 with a lot of AI-narrated channels flooding in. Channels that survived the wave tended to do one of two things: lean into a visible host or personality so the brand is more than narration over panels, or specialize hard into a sub-niche (one genre, one source format) so the recommendation algorithm has clean signal about who to push the channel to. Daily uploading builds a habit, but if every video is "another comic narration" without a tighter format identity, the algorithm has a hard time figuring out who the next viewer should be. That's the move I'd be watching for over the next six months on this channel.

Common questions

How many subscribers does @BellasComicChronicles have?

As of June 2026, @BellasComicChronicles has 22,900 subscribers. The channel is US-based, has published 469 videos total, and accumulated about 3.52 million lifetime views — which works out to roughly 7,500 views per video on the lifetime average. In the comic and story-narration niche, 22.9K puts the channel in the post-cold-start zone but below the 100K threshold where YouTube's algorithm tends to start treating a channel as a niche authority. It's a meaningful audience, but the kind of size where the growth curve usually either accelerates with a format tweak or plateaus for a while.

How often does @BellasComicChronicles upload videos?

Based on the last 30 uploads, the channel is on a daily long-form schedule — 30 uploads in 30 days, zero Shorts in that window. The channel description backs this up, mentioning daily updates. That's an aggressive cadence for the comic-narration space, where many competing channels mix long-form with Shorts to feed discovery. Daily upload schedules can work, but they put real pressure on each individual video's per-video yield — at 7,500 lifetime views per video on average, the question becomes whether daily volume brings more total reach than a tighter weekly schedule would, or whether it dilutes the catalog.

What niche is @BellasComicChronicles in?

The channel is in the comic, novel, and story-narration niche — based on the channel description, content centers on stories, comics, and novels delivered as a reading experience. This is a competitive lane in 2026, with a lot of channels (some human-narrated, many AI-narrated) adapting webcomics, manhwa, and novel chapters into long-form video format. The successful sub-niches tend to be tightly focused — one genre, one source format — rather than broadly themed. With 469 videos in the catalog, @BellasComicChronicles has clearly committed to this lane and built up real volume in it.

How many videos has @BellasComicChronicles published in total?

The channel has published 469 videos as of June 2026, with 3,524,526 total channel views. The subs-to-videos ratio works out to about 49 subscribers earned per video published. In the long-form narration space, that ratio is on the lower end — channels with strong format-market fit usually land closer to one new sub per five to ten videos. The high video count paired with a more modest subscriber number often signals one of two things: a long tail of underperforming back-catalog videos, or audience saturation in a tight niche where existing viewers watch but few new ones convert.

What's the average view count for @BellasComicChronicles videos?

The lifetime average works out to roughly 7,515 views per video — 3.52M total views divided across 469 uploads. The live scrape of recent video view counts returned zeros, which looks like a data-pull artifact rather than actual zero-view uploads, so I can't tell you what the last 10 videos individually pulled. The lifetime number is the more reliable signal here. A 7,500-view average on a 22.9K-subscriber channel is reasonable for the comic-narration niche but suggests any individual upload reaches a small fraction of the subscriber base — usually a signal that subs aren't being notified or aren't returning daily.

What could @BellasComicChronicles do to grow faster from here?

From outside data alone, three diagnosable gaps. First, the complete absence of Shorts in the last 30 uploads — pulling 30-60 second dramatic moments from existing comic narrations is one of the lowest-effort, highest-yield discovery plays for this niche in 2026. Second, with 469 videos in the back catalog, finding the three or four highest-performing uploads and producing sequels or remixes is usually higher ROI than the 470th daily new upload. Third, tightening the format identity by picking one genre or source format and committing gives the algorithm cleaner signal about who to recommend the channel to. Daily volume helps, but format clarity helps more past 20K subs.

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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.