@NiteesH_GaminG_00 Channel Audit: 22.1K Subs, 770 Videos, Honest Diagnosis
Free creator diagnostic
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.
@NiteesH_GaminG_00 sits at 22,100 subscribers with 770 uploads and 34.8 million lifetime channel views — roughly 45,200 views per video on average, which is a meaningfully healthier per-video ratio than the subscriber count alone implies. It's a long-form gaming channel based in India that's clearly been grinding for years.
Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026
- Handle
- @NiteesH_GaminG_00
- Subscribers
- 22,100
- Videos
- 770
- Country
- India
Hello Welcome To NiteesH GaminG. ❤️ Thanks to support me everyone ❤️
770 uploads to 22,100 subscribers — that's the first thing that jumps out. This is a creator who has done the work, who has been posting through Indian gaming for what looks like several years. The conversion works out to roughly one subscriber gained for every 35 videos posted, which is on the lower end and is probably the single most diagnosable thing about the channel from outside the studio.
The more interesting number, though, is the lifetime per-video average. 34,836,156 total views divided by 770 videos lands at about 45,200 views per upload. That's roughly double the subscriber count, which means a meaningful share of the channel's viewership has historically come from non-subscribers — browse, search, suggested. For a gaming channel that's the discovery loop you actually want. The audience problem isn't reach. It's the gap between someone watching a video and someone hitting subscribe.
A note on the recent upload data, because honesty matters here. My scrape pulled the last 10 uploads with blank titles and zero views across the board. That's almost certainly a metadata read failure on my end rather than the channel posting truly empty videos — YouTube sometimes serves partial data when recent uploads are unlisted, scheduled, or members-only, or when a channel's RSS feed lags behind its actual page. I'd rather flag the gap than invent video titles. Worth checking the channel page directly to confirm what's actually live.
What I can see cleanly is the content mix. All 30 of the most recent tracked uploads are long-form, with zero Shorts. In 2026 Indian gaming that's increasingly an outlier choice. Most channels in this lane — across BGMI, Free Fire, Minecraft, GTA RP, whatever the title — are running a barbell: long-form gameplay for watch-time and revenue, Shorts for net-new audience pickup. Skipping Shorts entirely at 22K subs with a 770-video back catalog of potential clip material is leaving the easiest discovery lever sitting on the floor.
The channel description is also doing very little work right now. 'Welcome To NiteesH GaminG. Thanks to support me everyone' is sweet, and you can hear the actual person behind it, but it tells viewers and the algorithm nothing about which games are covered, what the upload schedule looks like, or what makes this channel different from the thousands of other Indian gaming creators. Channels at this band that are pushing for the next tier usually treat that description as positioning real estate — game names, format, schedule, language — not a thank-you note.
Now the forward-looking piece, because it's where the actual decision lives. For an Indian gaming channel that's hit 22,100 subs through pure volume, the natural next move is segmentation rather than more output. 770 videos almost certainly spans multiple games and multiple series. The data I can't see from outside is which 10 or 20 of those videos account for an outsized share of the 34.8M lifetime views. If I were sitting across from this creator I'd ask one question first: which two game franchises and which one or two specific series are pulling 60% of the channel's lifetime views? That's where the bet goes. The 1-sub-per-35-videos conversion tells me breadth has been the strategy. The next phase is depth.
One more thing, then I'll stop. The country signal matters more than people give it credit for. India is one of YouTube's largest gaming markets, but it's also one of the most ruthlessly competitive, with channels at the top genuinely dominating viewer attention. Mid-tier creators in the 20K to 50K band tend to either consolidate around something ultra-specific — a particular game mode, a regional language, a single recurring format — or they plateau. The 45,200 average views per upload tells me the algorithm is still actively serving NiteesH GaminG's content. So the real question isn't whether the channel can grow. It's whether the next hundred uploads sharpen the focus or repeat the pattern that already got it here.
Common questions
How many subscribers does @NiteesH_GaminG_00 have?
As of this audit, @NiteesH_GaminG_00 sits at 22,100 subscribers. That puts the channel in the mid-tier band of Indian gaming YouTube — clearly above the hobbyist tier but well below the 100K threshold where most channels start unlocking meaningful brand deals and steadier AdSense revenue. The interesting context is that 22,100 subs is paired with 770 uploaded videos and 34.8 million lifetime views, which tells me the audience problem isn't reach. Non-subscribers are clearly finding the content. The leak is between view and subscribe, not before.
How many videos has @NiteesH_GaminG_00 uploaded in total?
770 videos at the time of this audit. That's a serious back catalog and points to several years of consistent uploading. The math works out to roughly one subscriber gained for every 35 videos posted, which is on the lower end of conversion ratios for gaming content. Volume strategies can build a long-tail search asset over time — and the 34.8M total view count suggests this one has — but at some point a channel has to stop trading breadth for depth if subscriber growth specifically is the goal. The catalog is built. Now it's about what gets focused on next.
What's @NiteesH_GaminG_00's average views per video?
Total channel views of 34,836,156 divided by 770 videos lands at approximately 45,200 views per upload on a lifetime basis. That's a stronger per-video number than the 22,100 subscriber count would suggest, and it's the most interesting signal in the entire dataset. It means a significant chunk of the channel's viewership comes from non-subscriber discovery — browse traffic, search, suggested videos. The top of the funnel is working. The structural problem is that those views aren't converting into subscribes at a rate that matches the reach.
Does @NiteesH_GaminG_00 post YouTube Shorts?
Based on the last 30 tracked uploads, no — 30 long-form videos, zero Shorts. In 2026 that's a deliberate choice but an increasingly unusual one for a channel at 22K subs that's trying to push past a plateau. Shorts have become the primary new-audience pickup vehicle on YouTube, especially for gaming where short clip culture — kills, fails, reactions, glitches — is enormous in the Indian market specifically. A channel sitting on 770 long-form uploads has a goldmine of clippable material that could feed a Shorts pipeline at essentially zero additional production cost.
What niche is @NiteesH_GaminG_00's channel in?
The handle and the minimal channel description both signal gaming, and the India country tag combined with the per-video math suggests the channel likely covers games popular in the Indian YouTube ecosystem — typically BGMI, Free Fire, Minecraft, or GTA RP, though I can't confirm which specifically without the video titles loading cleanly in the live data. The long-form-only upload pattern fits the gameplay walkthrough or full-session model rather than the highlight-clip format that dominates Shorts-first gaming channels in the same region.
What's the biggest growth gap visible from outside?
Two gaps stand out clearly. First, the channel description is one sentence with no keywords, no game names, no upload schedule, no positioning. For a channel at this size trying to break through, that's expensive real estate sitting empty. Second, the complete absence of Shorts in the last 30 uploads. Gaming on YouTube in 2026 runs on a barbell — long-form for retention and revenue, Shorts for new-audience pickup. Skipping one side of that barbell at 22K subs with 770 videos worth of potential clip material is leaving the easiest discovery lever on the table.
Free creator diagnostic
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.