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Channel audit · @VCDiesel

@VCDiesel YouTube Channel Audit: 2,070 Subs, 1,800 Video Diagnosis

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@VCDiesel sits at 2,070 subscribers across 1,800 total videos and 129,541 lifetime channel views — that's roughly 72 views per video averaged over 8+ years on YouTube. The math here tells most of the story: massive output, modest cumulative reach, and a content mix spanning treasure hunting, fishing, hunting, gaming, and streaming.

Channel data · captured Jun 16, 2026

Handle
@VCDiesel
Subscribers
2,070
Videos
1,800
Country
United States

What's going on I'm VCDiesel, I Stream on Friday and Saturday Nights Usually by 9:30pm EST. If Friday is Missed, then Sunday is the Substitute Day same time. I Usually try to Upload some sort of video 2x a week on Youtube. Whether it be going on an Adventure, Treasure Hunting, Hunting, Fishing, Hiking, Gaming, or Creating Different forms of Content. You can most likely find it here. I have been a part of Youtube for over 8 years and FINALLY, I plan on actually trying to care more about the content I create, instead of just putting unedited and unworked videos out there. So please bear with me. I hope you will enjoy, and decide to be a part of my journey to the top. My dream is to be able to dabble in Philanthropy and to have enough money to start multiple multi-million dollar foundations in order to help the people that need help based on the hurdles my family and I have encountered in our lifetime. Thank you for stopping by, I hope you'll stay awhile.

The headline diagnostic on this channel is the ratio. 1,800 uploads, 129,541 lifetime views — that comes out to roughly 72 views per video averaged across 8+ years. For context, most variety channels that hit 2K subscribers got there with 200-400 videos, not 1,800. So @VCDiesel is doing about 5-9x the work for the same audience size, which usually points to one specific problem: the algorithm doesn't know who to show the channel to.

Look at the description and you'll see why. The stated content menu is Adventure, Treasure Hunting, Hunting, Fishing, Hiking, Gaming, plus "different forms of content." That's six distinct verticals on one handle. In 2026 YouTube still leans heavily on topical consistency for the recommendation engine — every video on a channel is essentially a vote for what the channel "is," and when those votes are split six ways the system tends to spread shallow reach across many small audiences instead of building one deep one. A treasure-hunting viewer isn't reliably a Call of Duty viewer; a hunting viewer probably skips the stream VODs. The audience that watches one type doesn't carry over to the next.

The stream schedule is actually a strength worth calling out. Friday and Saturday 9:30pm EST is a defendable, recurring slot — most successful streamers I know run tighter cadences than 1,800-VOD variety channels, and the consistency here is real. Eight years of showing up matters. But there's a tension between the streaming identity (Fri/Sat live, Sunday backup) and the 2x-weekly YouTube upload commitment. Streaming and edited uploads are different muscles, different audiences, different algorithms. Trying to do both at high volume without staffing usually means both suffer.

A weird thing about the live data pull on this channel: the last 10 long-form uploads all show 0 views and no titles available in the scrape. That can mean a few things — videos uploaded within the last hour before the scrape ran, scheduled unlisted premieres, or a metadata fetch issue on our end. It's not necessarily a real "every upload got zero" situation, and I want to be honest that I can't see the actual titles or thumbnails from this pull. Worth checking on their end whether recent videos are indexing normally on the channel page.

That said, even if those zeros are a scrape artifact, the 72-view lifetime average is real and it's where the diagnosis lives. The fix isn't more uploads — they've proven they can produce. The fix is concentrating. If I were sitting across from this creator, the conversation I'd want to have is: out of those six content pillars, which one consistently does best? Not by feel — pull up the back end, sort lifetime by views, look at the top 20. Are they treasure hunting? Hunting trips? A specific game? Whatever theme owns most of the top 20, that's the channel the algorithm has already been trying to build, and the data is quietly telling them.

The other observable gap is description and titling discipline. The channel description as written is a friendly intro, but it doesn't give YouTube's classifier strong keywords to anchor on. Phrases like "different forms of content" actively confuse intent. Once a content focus is picked, the description, banner, channel trailer, and the next 20 video titles need to align — including pulling clearer search terms into the metadata where possible. Right now "VCDiesel" by itself returns no search context for a cold new viewer.

One forward-looking thought. With 1,800 videos as a back catalog, there's a real opportunity most channels don't have: a structured playlist plus thumbnail refresh on the strongest 50 videos. A treasure-hunting playlist with refreshed thumbs, a fishing playlist, a gaming playlist — basically letting the algorithm finally categorize an 8-year archive that was probably uploaded in chronological mess. Playlists in 2026 still pull weight in suggested feeds, and a creator with this much catalog is leaving compound interest on the table by not bucketing it.

The streaming side could honestly become the primary identity. Fri/Sat 9:30pm EST is a real schedule, and a "live with VCDiesel" hook is much sharper than "I make adventure, hunting, fishing, gaming and different content." Picking the stream as the anchor, building YouTube uploads as supporting content and stream highlights around it, and letting the variety stay live where variety actually works — that's a strategy that matches what's already been built here.

Common questions

How many subscribers does @VCDiesel have on YouTube?

@VCDiesel sits at 2,070 subscribers as of June 2026, with 1,800 total uploads and 129,541 lifetime channel views. That's an unusual ratio — most variety channels at this subscriber tier got there with 200-400 videos, not 1,800. The 8+ years of consistent activity is real, but the per-video reach averages around 72 lifetime views, which is the central data point any honest channel audit would lead with. The output is high; the cumulative audience hasn't compounded the way it would on a more topically concentrated channel.

What kind of content does @VCDiesel post on YouTube?

Based on the channel description, the content mix spans treasure hunting, hunting, fishing, hiking, adventure, gaming, and live streaming — six or seven distinct categories on one handle. The stream schedule runs Friday and Saturday around 9:30pm EST, with Sunday as backup. On the YouTube side, the stated cadence is roughly 2 uploads per week. The variety is the channel's defining feature and probably its biggest growth tension: the algorithm in 2026 still rewards topical concentration, and a six-pillar channel asks the recommendation system to figure out a viewer fit that's hard to lock in.

How often does @VCDiesel stream and upload to YouTube?

The schedule in the channel description is Friday and Saturday nights around 9:30pm EST for streams, with Sunday as the substitute if Friday gets missed. On top of that, the creator commits to roughly 2 YouTube uploads per week. So a typical week is 4+ pieces of content between streams and edited videos. With 1,800 videos archived across 8+ years, the consistency claim checks out — the volume is genuinely there. The question this audit raises isn't "are they producing enough" but whether all of that production is pulling in the same direction or scattering across too many themes.

Why does @VCDiesel have 1,800 videos but only 2,070 subscribers?

Honestly, the most likely answer is content scatter. 1,800 videos across treasure hunting, hunting, fishing, gaming, streaming highlights, and "different forms of content" means YouTube's recommendation system has been getting mixed signals for years about who the target viewer actually is. When the algorithm can't confidently match a channel to a single audience, it tends to spread shallow reach across many tiny pockets instead of compounding one. The result is exactly what the numbers show: 72 lifetime views per video on average, and a subscriber count that hasn't scaled with the upload count. The fix is concentration, not more volume.

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

Two things, both based on the visible data. First, a back-catalog cleanup: with 1,800 existing videos, sorting the lifetime top 20 by views would surface which of the six content pillars actually has audience momentum, and a thumbnail and playlist refresh on those would let the algorithm finally categorize the archive. Second, leaning into the stream identity. The Friday/Saturday 9:30pm EST schedule is a real, defendable slot — building YouTube uploads as stream highlights and supporting content around that anchor would give the channel one clear hook instead of six competing ones.

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.