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Channel audit · @GauravisliveYT

@GauravisliveYT Channel Audit: 10,800 Subs, 541 Videos Analyzed

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@GauravisliveYT is a BGMI live streaming channel out of India with 10,800 subscribers, 541 total uploads, and 4.74M lifetime channel views — averaging roughly 8,755 views per video over the channel's history. The most recent upload shows 0 views, which is the audit's most actionable signal.

Channel data · captured Jun 15, 2026

Handle
@GauravisliveYT
Subscribers
10,800
Videos
541
Country
India

subscribe my channel My bgmi ID 51226861538 10k subscribe complete thank you so much all subscriber ❤️❤️

First thing worth noting — @GauravisliveYT is a BGMI (Battlegrounds Mobile India) channel operating out of India, which puts it in one of the most crowded mobile gaming categories on YouTube IN. The channel sits at 10,800 subscribers with 541 total uploads, which works out to roughly 135 videos per year if you spread it across the four years the account has been active. That cadence is consistent with a live-streaming-first channel, not a polished long-form one, and a quick look at the channel description ('My bgmi ID 51226861538') backs that up — this is a streamer, not an editor.

Run the math on lifetime views and you get 4,736,323 divided by 541 videos, which lands around 8,755 views per video as a channel-wide average. That's not a terrible number on paper for a Tier-2 BGMI streaming channel in India. But averages lie, especially in live-streaming catalogs — the distribution is almost always heavily skewed, where one or two streams pulled big numbers (probably during a BGMI relaunch window or a tournament cycle) and most of the catalog sits well under a thousand views. Without watch-time data from the outside I can't prove the shape, but every BGMI streaming channel I've ever looked at sized like this follows that pattern.

Here's the part that jumped straight out of the data — the most recent upload listed has 0 views and no visible title. That's either a video that went live in the last few minutes (in which case ignore me), a stream that was deleted or set to private mid-flight, or a thumbnail-and-title pipeline that quietly broke. If you're the creator reading this, open YouTube Studio and check that the recent upload has metadata filled in. Empty titles kill discoverability before the algorithm even tries to show the video to anyone. Even a placeholder like 'BGMI Live Stream June 2026' would let the suggested-video graph find it. Right now it's invisible.

The channel description is honest but doing almost no SEO work. 'subscribe my channel, My bgmi ID 51226861538, 10k subscribe complete thank you so much all subscriber' — that's a thank-you note, not a positioning statement. There's no language signal for the algorithm beyond the in-game ID, no schedule ('streams Mon-Wed-Fri'), no positioning ('Hindi BGMI ranked grinder'), no link to where viewers can find the highlights. For Indian BGMI viewers searching channel-level keywords like 'BGMI live stream Hindi' or 'BGMI rank push live India', that description is functionally invisible. Even adding two sentences of positioning would let the channel show up for queries it currently can't.

The 541-video catalog is the most underrated asset here, and also the clearest growth gap. Live streams that have aged past their stream date are basically dead inventory unless they get repackaged. The thing I'd look at first if I were running this channel — there's almost certainly a 'top 5 best moments from streams' shorts pipeline that hasn't been built yet. Channels in this exact band, 10K to 20K BGMI subs in India, generally break out when they start treating the long-form stream as raw material for a shorts-clip feed rather than the finished product. That single repositioning, treating the VOD as source not product, is what the data suggests is missing.

The forward-looking piece, and worth saying honestly — BGMI as a search term in India peaks around game updates and tournament cycles. June 2026 sits inside the BGMI Pro Series window historically, and channels that align upload titles to current map rotations and tournament narratives ride those traffic spikes for free. From outside I can't tell if @GauravisliveYT does this already, but a single long-form upload in the recent window I can see doesn't suggest a tournament-cycle content calendar. Worth checking the upload titles from the last two BGMS seasons against actual tournament dates — if they don't overlap, that's an easy gap to close before the next event window opens.

Common questions

How many subscribers does @GauravisliveYT have?

@GauravisliveYT sits at 10,800 subscribers as of the June 15, 2026 audit pull. For context, that places the channel in the Tier-2 BGMI streamer band on Indian YouTube — past the new-channel scrum but well below the 100K silver-button threshold where the algorithm really starts pushing content into broader recommendation feeds. The description references a recent '10k subscribe complete thank you' note, which means the channel crossed five digits recently enough that the creator hasn't updated the bio yet. That's a freshness signal worth dating roughly to early-to-mid 2026.

What niche is @GauravisliveYT's channel in?

@GauravisliveYT is a BGMI (Battlegrounds Mobile India) live streaming channel. The channel description explicitly lists a BGMI in-game ID (51226861538), which is the giveaway, and the 541-upload count combined with the views-per-video math is consistent with a live-streaming-first content model rather than edited gameplay videos. BGMI is one of the most saturated categories on Indian YouTube, with thousands of channels competing for overlapping search terms like 'BGMI live', 'BGMI rank push', and 'BGMI montage'. Surviving in that niche generally requires either a strong on-camera personality, a tournament-credentialed angle, or a clipped-shorts strategy.

How often does @GauravisliveYT upload?

Based on 541 total uploads against an account roughly four years old, the average works out to about 135 videos per year, or 2-3 uploads per week. That cadence is normal for a live-streaming channel where most of the volume is captured streams. The audit pull showed only one long-form video in the most recent window and zero shorts, which is a smaller signal than you'd want to draw firm conclusions from — could be a pull-time artifact, or could indicate the cadence has slowed recently. Worth checking the upload calendar directly on the channel page.

Why is @GauravisliveYT's recent video showing 0 views?

Honestly, can't tell for certain from outside. The most recent upload has 0 views and no visible title in the scrape, which means one of three things — the video was uploaded within the last few minutes before the data pull (likely if you're seeing this just after a stream ended), the video was deleted or made private during or right after the stream, or the upload pipeline misfired and pushed a video without metadata. If the creator is reading this, the diagnostic step is just opening YouTube Studio and confirming the video has a title, thumbnail, and description set.

What's the biggest growth gap visible in @GauravisliveYT's data?

The shorts-clips pipeline. The channel has 541 long-form streams sitting in the catalog, which is essentially raw material that hasn't been mined. Channels at the 10K-to-20K BGMI subscriber tier in India that break out toward 100K almost universally make the same move — they start clipping highlights from streams into 30-60 second shorts and posting those daily. The long-form streams keep retention high during the broadcast, but it's the shorts that drive the subscriber surge. From the audit data, that pipeline appears not to be running yet. Building it would be the single highest-impact change.

What does @GauravisliveYT's description tell us about positioning?

Not much, which is exactly the problem. The full description reads: 'subscribe my channel, My bgmi ID 51226861538, 10k subscribe complete thank you so much all subscriber'. That's a thank-you note and an in-game ID — it's not a positioning statement. For the YouTube algorithm and external search alike, the channel description is one of the few places that helps the channel surface for keyword queries. Adding even two sentences about language (Hindi/English), schedule (which days streams happen), and content type (rank push, scrims, customs, montage) would open up channel-level discovery that currently isn't happening.

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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.