@AIsoldiers Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared
@AIsoldiers (2,060 subs, 212 videos) competes most directly with @UmairKhalid07 (2,350 subs, 54 videos) and @EverythingDoWithAI (3,700 subs, 426 videos). The biggest observable gap: @AIsoldiers has uploaded 212 times to get to 2K subs, while @UmairKhalid07 hit similar numbers with only 54 uploads — roughly a 4x efficiency difference per video.
Channel data · captured May 14, 2026
- Handle
- @AIsoldiers
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
The handle @AIsoldiers plus the company it's keeping — a couple of India-based AI/skills channels, a coder, a gaming creator — points toward the AI tools and faceless content corner of YouTube. It's a crowded, fast-moving niche where most channels live between 1K and 10K subs and upload constantly. The five channels surfaced here all share something with @AIsoldiers: either the audience geography (a heavy South Asia footprint), the volume-first strategy (212 videos for 2K subs is a lot of swings), or both. None of these are obvious mentors. They're more like peers running parallel experiments at the same stage.
@UmairKhalid07 (2,350 subs, 54 videos, Pakistan) is the cleanest comparison on size — basically the same sub count as @AIsoldiers, just 290 ahead. The interesting thing is the video count: 54 vs 212. Either @UmairKhalid07 is making longer-form pieces that hit harder per upload, or one or two videos caught and carried the channel. The description ("Dream 100k subscribers") tells you nothing about niche, which is itself a tell. If you're at @AIsoldiers' stage, this is the channel to peek at — same level, opposite philosophy. Follow if you want to see what fewer-but-bigger swings look like in practice.
@viral_coder (1,200 subs, 265 videos, India) is the only channel in this set smaller than @AIsoldiers, and the only one with a worse video-to-sub ratio. 265 uploads, 1,200 subs — that's about 4.5 subs per video, even lower than @AIsoldiers' ~9.7. The name suggests shorts-heavy coding content, possibly with some AI tooling mixed in. If you're @AIsoldiers, this isn't a competitor you'd worry about pulling viewers from — you're already ahead. But it's a useful mirror for what the volume-first approach looks like when it isn't converting. Worth a glance to spot patterns you might be repeating without noticing.
@onlyoyelmax (3,340 subs, 154 videos) is the most stylistically loud channel in this group — that vertical "I LOVE YOU GUYS" + "10K SUBSCRIBE COMPLETE KARDO" description reads like a creator very deliberately styling themselves for a specific audience. Country isn't listed, but the language pattern suggests South Asia. With 154 videos and ~3.3K subs, they're meaningfully ahead of @AIsoldiers on both axes. The takeaway here isn't really the numbers — it's that this creator has a personality angle that @AIsoldiers' handle alone doesn't telegraph. If your channel feels generic from the outside, this profile is worth studying for how unmistakable they make themselves.
@youthgamingnihar6942 (2,490 subs, 542 videos, India) is the outlier in this set — explicitly a Minecraft and gaming shorts channel, not anything AI-adjacent. They probably surfaced as a similar channel because of audience geography overlap and the high-volume shorts strategy, not topic. 542 videos for 2,490 subs is about 4.6 subs per upload, which is shorts-typical. If @AIsoldiers is making faceless AI content for an Indian audience, this channel isn't a direct rival, but it shows what extreme cadence looks like in a different vertical. Useful as a benchmark for upload tempo, not for content.
@EverythingDoWithAI (3,700 subs, 426 videos, India) is the most direct overlap on topic — the channel is literally about AI for students and high-paying skills. Ajay, the creator, has an explicit niche, explicit positioning ("Smart Work > Hard Work"), and a clear audience (GATE and B.Tech exam prep plus AI tools). They're nearly 2x @AIsoldiers' sub count with 2x the videos, so similar efficiency, but with a much sharper hook. If you watch @AIsoldiers for AI content and want a more structured take, this is the one to follow. It's also the channel @AIsoldiers should study most carefully — same niche, clearer positioning, better traction.
If you watch @AIsoldiers, the closest companion follow is probably @EverythingDoWithAI — same topic, more developed format. @UmairKhalid07 is worth watching if you want to track another small AI/tech channel from a different angle. The other three (@onlyoyelmax, @viral_coder, @youthgamingnihar6942) are more useful as side mirrors than parallel watches. One thing worth noting: among this set, @AIsoldiers has the second-highest video count, behind only the gaming channel. That's a lot of uploads for the result. Whatever moves the channel next probably isn't more of them.
Common questions
Who are @AIsoldiers's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Based on size and topic, @AIsoldiers' closest competitors are @UmairKhalid07 (2,350 subs) and @EverythingDoWithAI (3,700 subs). @UmairKhalid07 matches almost exactly on sub count — within 300 — but uploads dramatically less (54 vs 212 videos). @EverythingDoWithAI is the strongest topical match, focused explicitly on AI tools and skills for an Indian student audience. Beyond those two, @onlyoyelmax (3,340 subs) sits in the same size band but with a much louder branding angle. The remaining two, @viral_coder and @youthgamingnihar6942, are more loosely related — sharing audience geography rather than actual topic.
How does @AIsoldiers compare to @UmairKhalid07?
@AIsoldiers and @UmairKhalid07 are roughly the same size — 2,060 vs 2,350 subscribers — so on the headline number, peers. The interesting split is video count. @AIsoldiers has 212 uploads to get there; @UmairKhalid07 has 54. That's about 4x the efficiency per video on @UmairKhalid07's side. Without seeing retention or view data from outside we can't tell whether their content is meaningfully better, or whether a couple of videos carried the whole channel. Either way, it's the kind of contrast worth a closer look if you're figuring out your own volume strategy.
What channels should I watch alongside @AIsoldiers?
If you're watching @AIsoldiers primarily for AI content, @EverythingDoWithAI is the obvious second follow — clearer positioning, similar topic, slightly bigger audience. @UmairKhalid07 makes sense if you want to track another small-to-mid AI/tech creator. The other three are more situational: @onlyoyelmax for personality-driven shorts, @viral_coder for code-heavy uploads, and @youthgamingnihar6942 only if you also care about Minecraft. Honestly, you don't need to follow all five. Two complementary follows that actually overlap with what you watch is more useful than five parallel ones.
Is @AIsoldiers the biggest channel in their niche?
No — within this competitor set, @AIsoldiers (2,060 subs) sits on the smaller half. @EverythingDoWithAI leads at 3,700 subs, followed by @onlyoyelmax (3,340), @youthgamingnihar6942 (2,490), and @UmairKhalid07 (2,350). Only @viral_coder (1,200 subs) is below. But "biggest in niche" depends on how you draw the niche — this set surfaced via similarity scraping, not a curated AI-channel list, so the actual AI-tools peer group on YouTube is wider than these five. Realistically @AIsoldiers is mid-pack among the channels the algorithm thinks are most similar.
What's the difference between @AIsoldiers and similar creators?
The clearest differentiator is volume vs positioning. @AIsoldiers has uploaded 212 times — more than every channel in this set except the gaming one — but sits at 2,060 subs. The other AI-leaning channel, @EverythingDoWithAI, has 426 uploads but a much sharper niche (AI for exam prep and high-paying skills), and sits at 3,700 subs. So the difference isn't effort — it's clarity of audience. @AIsoldiers' handle and empty description give a reader nothing to latch onto. Most of the better-performing peers here tell you exactly who they're for in the first line.
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