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Channel audit · @GettClutch

@GettClutch YouTube Channel Audit: CS2 Lineups, 3,670 Subs Analyzed

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@GettClutch sits at 3,670 subscribers with 277 uploaded videos but only 4,775 total channel views — roughly 17 lifetime views per upload, which is unusually low for a sub count this size. The channel runs daily CS2 lineup content, and most subs almost certainly arrived from Twitch and Discord rather than YouTube itself.

Channel data · captured Jun 16, 2026

Handle
@GettClutch
Subscribers
3,670
Videos
277
Country
Not listed

Your Daily CS2 Lineups •Socials: Discord: https://discord.gg/d8xQQW9wkN Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/gett.clutch Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/gettclutch TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@gettclutch All Links: https://linktr.ee/gettclutch My Config: https://github.com/GettClutch/CS2-Config •Business Inquiries: GettClutch@gmail.com

The headline number on this channel isn't the subscriber count, it's the ratio. 3,670 subs against 4,775 total channel views is the kind of math you almost never see organically — subscribers outnumber lifetime channel views by close to 1:1. For context, a healthy small YouTube channel usually runs somewhere between 50–200 lifetime views per subscriber. @GettClutch is running closer to 1.3. That points at one thing pretty clearly: this audience didn't come from YouTube. It came from somewhere else and got parked here.

The "somewhere else" is right there in the description. Twitch, Discord, Instagram, TikTok, a linktree, a CS2 config repo on GitHub. The YouTube channel is one node in a creator stack where Twitch is almost certainly the home base — that's normal for CS2 personalities who build communities around live play. So the right framing for this audit isn't "YouTube channel," it's "YouTube channel inside a Twitch creator's distribution stack," and that completely changes what counts as good or bad here.

The niche is CS2 lineups — daily, per the channel tagline. This is one of the most search-driven verticals on YouTube. People type "mirage A smoke ct spawn" into the search bar with intent, find a 25-second clip, and bounce. It's basically a utility niche where retention barely matters and discoverability is everything. The standard play here is Shorts, because the content is naturally Short-shaped: one lineup, one throw, 20 seconds. But the live data on the last 30 uploads shows 0 Shorts and 30 long-form. That's the most interesting strategic choice on the channel and worth poking at.

Long-form in a lineup niche only works if the videos are compilations — "every smoke for Mirage," "top 10 nuke lineups CS2," map-by-map utility guides. Those CAN rank, and they CAN pull search traffic, but they compete head-on with established CS2 lineup channels that have built link equity over years. With 277 uploads averaging ~17 lifetime views, whatever's being published isn't being found in search — either the titling isn't matching what people actually type, the thumbnails aren't winning the click against bigger channels, or the videos are too short/too long for what YouTube's algorithm is treating as the optimal length for the query. The scraper didn't return titles on the most recent batch, which makes diagnosis from the outside harder, but the views-per-upload pattern is consistent enough across 277 videos that this isn't a bad-luck cluster — it's the steady state.

The strength that IS visible: the creator is actually publishing. 277 uploads is a meaningful body of work, and "Your Daily CS2 Lineups" implies a daily cadence that they've apparently mostly held to. That's the rarest thing in this niche — most lineup channels burn out by 30 videos. Whoever's behind @GettClutch has the discipline part figured out. The problem is that consistency without distribution feedback is just a treadmill, and a 17-views-per-upload average suggests the feedback loop isn't closing.

The gap I'd flag from outside the channel: there's no Shorts strategy in a niche where Shorts are basically free distribution. CS2 lineup clips do extremely well on the Shorts shelf because they're satisfying to watch even if you don't play — the throw lands, the smoke pops, done. Posting the same lineup as both a long-form compilation entry AND a standalone Short is the move that most growing lineup channels are running in 2026. It also feeds the TikTok account that's already in the linktree, so it's not net-new work.

Forward-looking — the one thing that would actually move the needle here isn't more uploads, it's better titling on the existing back catalog. With 277 videos, there's a real chance some of those uploads target search terms with monthly volume but lose to better-titled competitors. Going back through the catalog and rewriting titles + thumbnails on the 20 oldest videos that already have any views at all (even 30-50 view ones) tends to compound faster than chasing the next upload. Hard to do from inside the daily-upload grind, but it's where the leverage sits for a channel with this much existing inventory and this little search visibility.

Common questions

How many subscribers does @GettClutch have on YouTube?

As of June 2026, @GettClutch has 3,670 YouTube subscribers. The unusual thing about that number is the context around it: the channel has 277 uploaded videos but only 4,775 total channel views, which means subscribers and lifetime views are running at almost a 1:1 ratio. That's a strong signal the subscriber base was built off-platform — likely Twitch and Discord, both of which are linked in the channel description — and migrated over rather than discovering the channel via YouTube search or browse.

What niche is @GettClutch's YouTube channel in?

@GettClutch is a CS2 (Counter-Strike 2) lineups channel — the description literally reads "Your Daily CS2 Lineups." This is a tight, search-driven utility niche where viewers look up specific grenade throws (smokes, molotovs, flashes) for specific maps and bombsites. The creator also maintains a Twitch stream, a Discord, Instagram and TikTok accounts, plus a public CS2 config repo on GitHub. So the YouTube channel is part of a broader CS2 creator stack rather than a standalone YouTube project.

Why does @GettClutch have so few views compared to subscribers?

The 4,775 total views against 3,670 subscribers ratio is the audit's biggest red flag. For organic YouTube growth you'd expect somewhere between 50 and 200 lifetime views per subscriber. @GettClutch is at roughly 1.3. The most likely explanation is that the subscriber base came from Twitch and Discord cross-promotion — viewers subbed to support the creator but don't actually watch the YouTube uploads. That pattern is common with streamer-first creators where YouTube is treated as an archive or secondary platform rather than the primary discovery channel.

Should a CS2 lineup channel like @GettClutch be posting Shorts?

Almost certainly, yes. The live data shows the last 30 uploads on @GettClutch were all long-form and 0 Shorts. CS2 lineups are one of the most Shorts-shaped content types on the platform — a single grenade throw, 20 seconds, visually satisfying. The Shorts shelf is essentially free distribution for that format in 2026, and a Short can be cut from the same footage already used in a long-form lineup compilation. Skipping Shorts entirely in a Shorts-friendly niche is the most diagnosable strategic gap visible from outside the channel.

How often does @GettClutch upload to YouTube?

The channel tagline reads "Your Daily CS2 Lineups" and the upload history backs that up directionally — 277 videos is a serious body of work for any channel under 5K subs, and implies the creator has held to something close to a daily cadence over time. That kind of upload consistency is the single rarest trait in the lineup niche, where most channels burn out inside 30 videos. The issue isn't volume or discipline on @GettClutch, it's that the distribution side of the equation hasn't caught up to the production side.

What's the biggest growth opportunity for @GettClutch right now?

Going back through the 277-video back catalog and rewriting titles and thumbnails on the older uploads that already have any view momentum — even 30-50 view videos. With this much existing inventory targeting a search-driven niche, retitling to match how viewers actually type lineup queries ("mirage smoke ct spawn cs2" style) tends to compound faster than chasing the next daily upload. Pair that with a Shorts strategy cut from the same lineup footage and the channel has two unused levers that don't require any new content production.

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