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Competitor comparison · @AnjusScience

@AnjusScience Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Analyzed

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@AnjusScience (42,100 subs, 808 videos) sits in Indian K-6-to-10 science tutoring, and the closest real competitor in the scraped set is @Srifactual_Fact (27,900 subs, 148 videos). The honest differentiator: AnjusScience teaches full syllabus topics with animations, while the others lean into facts, gaming, or anime — almost none are direct curriculum overlap.

Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026

Handle
@AnjusScience
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

First, a caveat worth naming upfront. The scraped competitor set here is unusually scattered — only one channel (@Srifactual_Fact) is actually in Indian educational content. The rest are a Fortnite streamer in the US, an anime curation channel, a Hindi gaming creator, and a Turkish For Honor player. That's not a clean niche match. What it tells me is that YouTube's "related channels" signal for @AnjusScience is weak right now, which is itself a finding — when a channel sits in a hyper-specific vertical (CBSE/state-board science, classes 6-10, Hindi-English code-switched), the algorithm struggles to map clean adjacencies. So I'll analyze each based on the audience overlap that actually exists, not pretend they're all teaching Newton's laws.

@Srifactual_Fact (27,900 subs, 148 videos, India) is the closest thing to a real competitor in this set. The bio is in Hinglish and explicitly positions itself as education + facts content, which puts it in front of the same Indian student audience scrolling Shorts between homework. The huge difference is volume strategy: 148 videos to AnjusScience's 808. Srifactual is leaner, likely fact-bite Shorts, while AnjusScience is deep on full topic explanations. A 6th-grader hunting "why does the moon have phases" probably finds AnjusScience; the same kid hunting a 30-second "3 facts about the human body" finds Srifactual. They're not competing for the same view — they're competing for the same channel-subscribe decision.

@verlaxify (35,100 subs, 1,100 videos, United States) is a Fortnite content creator and streamer. There is no curriculum overlap here, none. Why is YouTube surfacing this as adjacent? Best guess: subscriber age band. Verlaxify's audience and AnjusScience's audience probably both skew 11-15, and the recommendation graph picks that up before it picks up topic. Useful as a competitor study only in the sense of "what does a channel that's converted that exact demographic into 35K subs look like." His upload cadence (1,100 videos against 35K subs) suggests heavy Shorts and stream clip volume. Not a follow recommendation for an AnjusScience viewer, but a useful watch for AnjusScience the creator studying audience overlap math.

@an1mevaultofficial (50,700 subs, 318 videos, US) is the largest channel in the set and runs anime fan-edit / curation content. Different language, different vertical, different everything — except again, likely the same teen demographic. The interesting takeaway is that 50K with 318 videos is a much healthier subs-per-video ratio than AnjusScience's 42.1K with 808 videos. AnjusScience is averaging roughly 52 subs per video; an1mevault is closer to 160. That's not a fair comparison because curriculum tutoring is a slower burn than viral anime edits, but it's worth naming.

@ABHI_BHAI18 (23,800 subs, 1,700 videos, country unset) is a Hindi-language creator with extremely high upload volume — 1,700 videos to AnjusScience's 808, but with about half the subs. Bio is religious greetings plus what looks like gaming ("PLAY OF GAM…"). The real signal: this is what happens when you upload a lot in a regional-language audience without a tight content focus. AnjusScience has half the videos and almost double the subs, which is the inverse story and actually flattering to Anju's positioning. The lesson here is curation > volume in the Indian student segment.

@subwaysol (37,200 subs, 1,800 videos, Türkiye) is a For Honor gameplay channel. Geographically and topically zero overlap with AnjusScience. The only reason this likely showed up in the scrape: similar mid-tier sub count and very-high video volume. 1,800 uploads to 37K subs is roughly 21 subs per video — brutal efficiency, suggests heavy daily livestream archives. Not a competitive study for a science teacher, but a quiet reminder that high upload volume doesn't automatically mean a strong subscriber base.

If you watch @AnjusScience for class 6-10 science explanations in Hinglish, the only channel in this set worth adding to your rotation is @Srifactual_Fact, and only for short-form fact content. The rest are unrelated. The bigger story this competitor scrape tells: AnjusScience's actual peer set isn't visible in YouTube's recommendation graph yet, which usually means the niche is underbuilt — a quietly good position to be in if Anju keeps publishing.

Common questions

Who are @AnjusScience's biggest competitors on YouTube?

Based on the scraped set, the only direct competitor is @Srifactual_Fact (27,900 subs), another Indian education-focused channel using Hinglish. The other channels in YouTube's adjacency graph — @verlaxify (Fortnite, 35.1K), @an1mevaultofficial (anime, 50.7K), @ABHI_BHAI18 (Hindi gaming, 23.8K), and @subwaysol (For Honor, 37.2K) — aren't true competitors. They share audience demographics (teen viewers) but no topical overlap. The honest read: @AnjusScience's real competitors are probably other class 6-10 science tutors that didn't surface in this particular scrape.

How does @AnjusScience compare to @Srifactual_Fact?

Different strategies. @AnjusScience has 42,100 subs across 808 videos, focused on full-length topic explanations with animations for classes 6-10. @Srifactual_Fact has 27,900 subs across just 148 videos, which suggests longer-form or curated Shorts. AnjusScience is roughly 1.5x the subscriber base with 5.5x the video count. The two compete for the same student audience but at different moments — Anju catches the kid searching a specific syllabus topic, Srifactual catches the kid scrolling Shorts for general science facts. They could plausibly cross-promote without cannibalizing.

What channels should I watch alongside @AnjusScience?

From this scraped set, honestly only @Srifactual_Fact (27,900 subs) makes sense to follow alongside @AnjusScience if you're a student wanting both deep topic explanations and quick fact content. The other channels — Fortnite streaming, anime curation, Hindi gaming, For Honor gameplay — share zero topical overlap. If you're hunting more class 6-10 science content, you'd be better off searching directly for "CBSE science class 8" or your specific board than relying on YouTube's related-channel suggestions, which appear weak for this niche.

Is @AnjusScience the biggest channel in their niche?

Within this scraped set, @AnjusScience (42,100 subs) is second to @an1mevaultofficial (50,700 subs), but that's not a fair comparison — anime curation is a totally different vertical. Among the actual education competitor here, @Srifactual_Fact has 27,900 subs, so AnjusScience is about 1.5x larger. Whether Anju is genuinely the biggest in Indian class 6-10 science tutoring is impossible to say from this data alone — there are likely larger channels (Khan Academy India, BYJU's-adjacent creators) that simply didn't appear in YouTube's adjacency graph for this particular query.

What's the difference between @AnjusScience and similar creators?

The biggest differentiator is curriculum focus. @AnjusScience explicitly teaches class 6-10 science topics using animations and activities — that's structured educational content. @Srifactual_Fact leans into general fact-style edutainment. The other three channels in the set aren't educators at all. There's also a volume-per-sub story: AnjusScience averages about 52 subs per video across 808 uploads, while @an1mevaultofficial hits roughly 160 per video. Topic depth matters more than upload count in tutoring — Anju's slower burn is normal for the niche, not a weakness.

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