@h4x_Gojo_Fr Channel Audit: 2,750 Subs, 1M+ Views, Roblox Shorts Analysis
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@h4x_Gojo_Fr is a Pakistan-based Roblox gaming channel with 2,750 subscribers, 34 total uploads, and 1,072,908 lifetime views — meaning the channel averages roughly 31,500 views per video historically, but the most recent 30 uploads are all Shorts and the current 10 visible uploads each show 0 views.
Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026
- Handle
- @h4x_Gojo_Fr
- Subscribers
- 2,750
- Videos
- 34
- Country
- Pakistan
Welcome to my channel! I create gaming content focused on Roblox, performance gameplay, and entertaining edits. My goal is to bring you better content every upload. Subscribe and be part of the journey
Let me start with the math that jumped out at me. 1,072,908 total views divided across 34 videos is about 31,500 views per upload on average. For a channel sitting at 2,750 subs, that's a sub-conversion rate of roughly 0.25% — meaning for every 400 views the channel has ever generated, it picked up one subscriber. That's not a failure, it's a fingerprint. It's the exact pattern you see on channels where one or two videos went mildly viral on the Shorts shelf and the rest are doing modest numbers without converting browse-mode viewers into long-term subs.
The content mix tells the rest of the story. Last 30 uploads: 30 Shorts, 0 long-form. The description says "Roblox, performance gameplay, and entertaining edits" — that's a creator who's leaning hard into the Shorts-first strategy that worked for a lot of Roblox accounts in 2023-2024. The problem is the algorithm in 2026 treats Shorts viewers and main-feed subscribers as nearly separate audiences. A Roblox Short can hit 500K and only convert 50 subs because the swipe is the default action, not the subscribe tap.
The thing I genuinely can't explain from outside data: the 10 most recent uploads all show 0 views with empty titles in the public scrape. A few possible reads. One, they were just uploaded in the last few minutes and the view counter hasn't ticked over (possible if all 10 went up as a batch — some creators do scheduled batch drops on weekends). Two, they're set to unlisted or members-only and the scraper picked them up as zero-views. Three, the titles are genuinely blank — which would be a real problem because untitled Shorts get almost no metadata pickup from the Shorts algorithm and basically vanish into the void. If option three is right, that's the single highest-leverage fix on the channel.
For context on the 2,750 sub count: in the Roblox Shorts niche specifically, you've got accounts under 10K essentially fighting for the same browse-shelf placements as accounts at 500K. The algorithm doesn't really give you a meaningful boost for being small, but it does punish low CTR fast. The audit signal I'd want to see — and can't from outside — is the Shorts retention curve on the videos that actually got the 31K average. If those wins came from Roblox trend-jacking (specific game updates, viral memes from games like Doors, Brookhaven, Blox Fruits), the channel is sitting on a repeatable template. If they came from one fluke, the next 30 uploads probably don't replicate the spike.
What I'd look at if this were my channel. The historical 31K avg vs. 2,750 subs gap is the most actionable number on the page. That gap means viewers are watching but not subscribing — which in 2026 Shorts world usually means either the channel name and pfp don't read as a destination (just feels like another anonymous gaming clip account) or the videos don't end with any kind of "see more" hook back to a long-form library. There IS no long-form library here, which is the second pattern worth naming: a pure Shorts channel in a saturated game niche has a structural ceiling. The Roblox creators who broke past 100K in the last two years almost all run a Shorts-to-long-form funnel — 30-second clip on Shorts, 8-12 minute gameplay/commentary on the main feed.
One forward-looking thought, and I'll caveat this is just pattern-matching from outside the channel: posting one long-form Roblox video per week — even something simple like "I tried every Blox Fruit in one video" or "Brookhaven update reaction" — would give the channel something to convert the Shorts traffic into. The Shorts are already pulling viewers; right now there's nowhere for them to land. Adding a single weekly long-form upload is a small lift that historically has outsized impact for channels in exactly this shape (high view-to-sub ratio, Shorts-only, gaming).
The Pakistan country tag is worth one quick note. Roblox has a huge South Asian audience and a lot of the top Roblox creators in that region make English-language content because the game itself is English-default. That's already what @h4x_Gojo_Fr appears to be doing based on the description, so the geo isn't a constraint here — if anything it's a slight advantage on production costs for the volume of uploads needed to stay in the Shorts rotation.
Common questions
How many subscribers does @h4x_Gojo_Fr have?
As of June 2026, @h4x_Gojo_Fr has 2,750 subscribers. What's more interesting than the sub count is the ratio to total views — the channel has accumulated 1,072,908 lifetime views across 34 uploads, which works out to roughly 31,500 views per video on average. That's a sub-to-view ratio of about 0.25%, which is on the low side and typical of channels where most reach comes from the Shorts browse shelf rather than channel-page traffic. Browse-shelf viewers tend to swipe rather than subscribe.
What kind of content does @h4x_Gojo_Fr make?
Per the channel description, @h4x_Gojo_Fr makes "gaming content focused on Roblox, performance gameplay, and entertaining edits." The last 30 uploads are 100% Shorts — zero long-form videos in recent memory. That's a Roblox-first, Shorts-only positioning in 2026, which is a crowded lane. The handle styling (Gojo from Jujutsu Kaisen) suggests an anime-influenced edit style is part of the brand, which lines up with how a lot of Roblox montage Shorts get edited for the algorithm right now.
Why do @h4x_Gojo_Fr's recent uploads show 0 views?
Honestly, I can't tell from outside the channel. The 10 most recent uploads in the scrape all show 0 views with blank titles, which could mean they were uploaded in the same batch minutes before the data pull, they're set to unlisted or members-only, or the titles really are empty. If it's the third option, that's a fixable problem — Shorts with no title get almost no metadata signal and underperform compared to even one-word titles. The historical 31K view-per-video average suggests the channel can pull views when uploads are normal.
How does @h4x_Gojo_Fr compare to other Roblox YouTubers?
At 2,750 subs, the channel is below the threshold where Roblox creator deals (sponsorships, game collabs) typically kick in — most agencies start looking at 25K+. But the 1.07M total view count is unusually high for a channel this size, which means there's audience demand the channel hasn't fully converted yet. Top Roblox creators in the 100K-500K range almost universally run a Shorts + long-form funnel; @h4x_Gojo_Fr is Shorts-only right now, which historically caps growth around 10-30K subs unless something breaks structurally in their favor.
What's the biggest growth gap on @h4x_Gojo_Fr's channel?
The gap between 1,072,908 lifetime views and only 2,750 subscribers — about a 0.25% conversion rate. That tells me reach isn't the problem, conversion is. Viewers are finding the videos but not sticking around. Two plausible fixes from the outside: clearer channel branding so the channel page reads as a destination rather than a one-off clip account, and adding even a single weekly long-form upload to give Shorts viewers somewhere to land. Right now the channel page has no long-form content to convert curious Shorts watchers into subscribers.
Is @h4x_Gojo_Fr growing in 2026?
I can't see the growth curve from outside data — YouTube doesn't expose sub-count history publicly. What I can see is the upload pattern: 30 of the last 30 uploads are Shorts, which suggests an active posting schedule rather than a dormant channel. The 1.07M lifetime view count built on 34 videos means at least some of those Shorts hit reasonably well. Whether the channel is currently trending up, flat, or down depends on metrics only the creator can see in YouTube Studio — Shorts views over the last 28 days is the number I'd check first.
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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.