@AxiooGaming Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared
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@AxiooGaming (75,200 subs) sits in the Indian PC and mobile gaming niche, and its closest algorithmic neighbors are a mixed bag — @MSmeemes (49,600 subs) and @heemajain (38,500 subs) lead the pack on shared audience, not shared content. The key differentiator is format: gaming walkthroughs vs short-form comedy and study content.
Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026
- Handle
- @AxiooGaming
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
The honest take before we get into the five: none of these channels are direct gaming competitors to @AxiooGaming. They're audience-overlap neighbors — what YouTube's recommendation engine has decided sits near Rajesh's viewer base. For a channel at 75,200 subs uploading PC and mobile gameplay from India across 240 videos, the algorithmic "competitor" set tells you more about who watches alongside this audience than who's fighting for the same search terms. Worth keeping in mind as we go through these.
@MSmeemes runs 49,600 subs out of Pakistan with 267 videos focused on funny shorts and reaction edits. The overlap with @AxiooGaming isn't content — it's the Hindi/Urdu-speaking young-male Venn that YouTube has been blending since shorts took off. MSmeemes has more uploads on a smaller sub base (267 videos vs 240), which suggests a faster cadence leaning on viral edit churn. A creator like Rajesh might watch them to track what's spreading in regional shorts comedy, not to copy format. Follow them if you want a pulse on what's funny in the SAARC YouTube ecosystem right now.
@heemajain is the outlier that actually makes algorithmic sense if you squint. 38,500 subs, 505 videos — that's a heavy publishing pace, more than double @AxiooGaming's library — focused on study help and life advice from an "engineer-turned-teacher" angle. The content has nothing to do with gaming, but the audience overlap is real: young Indian viewers who toggle between unwinding with gameplay and grinding through prep content. For Rajesh, this is the channel whose audience is most likely to drift between his uploads and study content during exam season. Worth watching for how she sustains 505 uploads.
@Studygram.sugandha is interesting on the per-video math: 43,400 subs on only 74 videos. That's roughly 586 subs per video, significantly stronger per-upload conversion than @AxiooGaming's ~313. She's doing "study with me" content, a totally different format from gaming walkthroughs but sharing the long-session viewing pattern that YouTube clusters together. If Rajesh's videos average 20+ minute watch sessions, his audience profile might overlap with study viewers more than gamers would expect. The real lesson here is what high-retention, low-volume publishing looks like in 2026 — fewer videos, more conversion.
@EvernovaDrama is 51,900 subs on 184 videos, English-dubbed Chinese short dramas from a US-registered channel. Content overlap with @AxiooGaming is basically zero — different language target, different vertical entirely. What it tells you is YouTube is grouping @AxiooGaming with high-engagement vertical-video channels broadly, not with other gaming creators specifically. If you're scouting for actual gaming competitors, this is your signal that the recommendation graph is unreliable here, and Rajesh probably needs to run manual searches to find the channels he's really competing with on the gaming side.
@HotDramaZone-u9h has 41,300 subs with 399 videos — heavy publishing pace — also in short-drama territory with adult-leaning content warnings in the description. Same story as EvernovaDrama: zero content overlap with PC and mobile gaming, but YouTube has clustered them into @AxiooGaming's neighborhood. For Rajesh specifically, this is the signal worth tracking. When half your "similar channels" are short-drama uploads, your real gaming-audience competitors may be flying under the radar of the public recommendation graph, and your competitive intel is going to come from manual scouting rather than YouTube's "related" surfaces.
If you watch @AxiooGaming, the honest follow-recommendation from this set is @heemajain for Indian creator-economy adjacency and @MSmeemes for regional shorts comedy. Skip the drama channels unless you specifically want dubbed Chinese mini-series. And if you're Rajesh reading this, the more useful competitive scout is probably a manual search for Hindi PC and mobile gaming channels in the 50K-150K range — the algorithmic neighbors aren't pulling that set in for you.
Common questions
Who are @AxiooGaming's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Honestly, the algorithmic "competitor" set YouTube surfaces for @AxiooGaming is more about audience overlap than direct content competition. The closest in raw subscriber count are @EvernovaDrama at 51,900 and @MSmeemes at 49,600, but neither makes PC or mobile gaming content. If you're looking for actual head-to-head competitors in Indian gaming at the 75K range, you'll need to search manually for Hindi-language gaming channels — the public recommendation graph isn't surfacing those as neighbors here. The real competitive set for Rajesh is hidden behind YouTube's clustering choices, not exposed by them.
How does @AxiooGaming compare to @EvernovaDrama?
They're almost completely different channels operating in adjacent audience zones. @AxiooGaming has 75,200 subs and 240 videos of PC and mobile gameplay from India. @EvernovaDrama has 51,900 subs and 184 videos of English-dubbed Chinese short dramas from a US-registered account. The only thing they share is being grouped by YouTube as audience-adjacent, possibly because both rely on long-session viewing patterns. As actual competitors going after the same searches, they aren't competing. If you're comparing them, compare watch-time and session-length strategy, not topic or content angle.
What channels should I watch alongside @AxiooGaming?
From this competitor set, the two that make the most sense to add to your subscription feed are @heemajain (38,500 subs, study and life advice from India) and @MSmeemes (49,600 subs, Pakistani comedy shorts). Both serve the same broad Hindi/Urdu-speaking young-male YouTube audience that @AxiooGaming targets. The three short-drama channels in the set are content outliers — useful if you specifically want dubbed dramas, basically irrelevant if you're following Rajesh for gaming walkthroughs and PC/mobile content. Pick by audience overlap, not by what YouTube's "related" rail shows.
Is @AxiooGaming the biggest channel in their niche?
Within this specific five-channel competitor set, yes — @AxiooGaming's 75,200 subs is larger than all five comparators, with @EvernovaDrama next at 51,900. But this set isn't representative of the broader Indian gaming niche, which has channels well into the millions of subs. @AxiooGaming sits in the mid-tier creator range where the next jump — 100K and the Silver Play Button — is the meaningful milestone. Ranking against this particular set doesn't really tell you much about positioning in actual Indian gaming, since none of the five are gaming channels themselves.
What's the difference between @AxiooGaming and similar creators?
The main observable difference is content vertical. @AxiooGaming uploads PC and mobile gaming walkthroughs, tips, and missions across 240 videos. Of the five "similar" channels, two are short-drama uploads (@EvernovaDrama, @HotDramaZone-u9h), two are study-focused (@heemajain, @Studygram.sugandha), and one is comedy shorts (@MSmeemes). Format-wise, @AxiooGaming likely runs longer videos than the comedy and drama channels but shorter sessions than the study-with-me format. So the real difference here is basically gaming vs everything else — the channels share an audience, not a content type.
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