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Competitor comparison · @B.MCartoon-k6q

@B.MCartoon-k6q Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared

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@B.MCartoon-k6q (16,700 subs, 239 videos) sits closest in size to @djtheminecrafter (16,100 subs) and @FAUJDARACADEMY (15,300 subs), while @Srifactual_Fact at 27,900 leads the comparison set. The real differentiator: most competitors publish in clearly defined niches — tech, gaming, education — while B.MCartoon's public-facing positioning stays vague.

Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026

Handle
@B.MCartoon-k6q
Subscribers
Videos
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Not listed

The five channels YouTube surfaces as similar to @B.MCartoon-k6q aren't a tight topical cluster — they're a mixed bag of Indian tech, education, facts, and a single US Minecraft channel. The common thread is the sub-count tier: everyone here sits between roughly 11K and 28K. If the source name 'B.MCartoon' implies cartoon-style content, none of the five match topically. So this comparison set reads more like 'channels at a similar growth stage' than 'channels chasing the same audience.' That's worth knowing up front — it changes what you do with the comparison.

@BeyondTheScreenn (11,600 subs, 124 videos, India) is the smallest of the bunch and runs the lowest output. 124 uploads across the channel's life is roughly half of what @B.MCartoon-k6q has put out (239), so this is a creator publishing far less but holding around 11K. Ashwin frames it as casual tech chat — first-person, low production weight. They differ from B.MCartoon-k6q in basically every way except sub-count proximity: solo presenter, English commentary, tech-explainer angle. Follow them instead of B.MCartoon if you want personal-voice tech takes from an Indian creator, not animated or cartoon-style content.

@FAUJDARACADEMY (15,300 subs, 491 videos, India) is the highest-output channel in this comparison — 491 videos is more than 2x B.MCartoon's library. That's exam-prep cadence: RPSC, KVS, NVS, TGT, PGT all referenced in the description. The per-video sub return works out to roughly 31 subs per upload, which is normal for tutoring channels where videos function as a structured library, not as discovery hooks. Follow @FAUJDARACADEMY if you're prepping for Indian government teacher-recruitment exams. Don't follow them expecting entertainment — the format is built for students returning to specific topics, not for casual scroll.

@Srifactual_Fact (27,900 subs, 148 videos, India) is the biggest channel in the set by a comfortable margin — about 67% larger than @B.MCartoon-k6q. They've done it on 148 videos, which gives them by far the strongest sub-per-video ratio in the comparison (~188). That's the signal of a channel that figured out a repeatable format early: Hindi-English educational facts, short, packaged. The output curve here is the opposite of @FAUJDARACADEMY — fewer videos doing more work each. Follow @Srifactual_Fact if you want bite-sized facts content in Hinglish; this is what efficient growth in the short-form facts lane actually looks like at the 25K range.

@djtheminecrafter (16,100 subs, 328 videos, United States) is the only non-India channel in the set and the closest to B.MCartoon-k6q in raw sub count — they're within 600 subscribers of each other. Apollo's positioning is dead simple: a kid-friendly Minecraft gaming channel. 328 videos is heavy output for one person on a single game. The angle, language market, and content type are completely different from any other channel in this list. Follow @djtheminecrafter if you specifically want Minecraft gameplay; the algorithm's clustering them with B.MCartoon-k6q probably reflects shared viewer demographics — younger audience, animation/cartoon adjacency — more than topical overlap.

@TheCloudXBerry (12,000 subs, 369 videos, India) is a developer-education channel covering cloud infrastructure, databases, and software-career commentary. 369 videos is the second-highest output in the comparison set, suggesting a tutorial library being built methodically rather than a viral-hook play. The audience here is professional and narrow: working developers or CS students. There's basically no overlap with cartoon-style or general-entertainment viewers. Follow @TheCloudXBerry if you write code for a living and want practical cloud explainers; the channel reads like one of those 'I want to teach what I do at work' projects, which usually means accurate but unflashy content that lives or dies on search traffic.

If you watch @B.MCartoon-k6q, the honest answer is that none of the five algorithmically-grouped channels are great substitutes — the cluster mixes tech, exam prep, facts, gaming, and dev tutorials. The closest match by raw size and audience age is probably @djtheminecrafter (gaming, kid-friendly, US, 16,100 subs). The closest match by what an Indian-audience entertainment viewer might also click is probably @Srifactual_Fact, which at least sits in a similar bite-sized format lane. The rest are worth watching only if you happen to want what they specifically teach.

Common questions

Who are @B.MCartoon-k6q's biggest competitors on YouTube?

By sub-count proximity, @djtheminecrafter (16,100 subs) and @FAUJDARACADEMY (15,300 subs) are the closest peers — both within 1,500 subs of B.MCartoon-k6q's 16,700. @Srifactual_Fact at 27,900 is the largest channel YouTube groups them with. The honest read is that this isn't a tight topical cluster — it's a sub-count tier. Real topical competitors for a cartoon-style channel would be other animation creators, none of which appear in the algorithmically-surfaced set here. Treat these five as growth-stage peers, not direct audience overlap.

How does @B.MCartoon-k6q compare to @BeyondTheScreenn?

@B.MCartoon-k6q has 16,700 subs and 239 videos; @BeyondTheScreenn has 11,600 subs and 124 videos. So B.MCartoon-k6q is roughly 44% larger but has produced nearly double the uploads. BeyondTheScreenn is a solo tech-commentary channel run by Ashwin out of India, while B.MCartoon-k6q's public positioning stays thinner — the description just asks for 20K subs without explaining the format. The two don't share a niche; they share a similar growth stage. Follow BeyondTheScreenn for casual Indian tech takes, not as a cartoon substitute.

What channels should I watch alongside @B.MCartoon-k6q?

Honestly, the algorithmically-similar set isn't a great recommendation list if you came for cartoon content. The closest tonal and audience matches are probably @djtheminecrafter (16,100 subs, US Minecraft gameplay) for kid-friendly entertainment, and @Srifactual_Fact (27,900 subs, India) for short-form Hinglish facts. The other three — @FAUJDARACADEMY (exam prep), @TheCloudXBerry (dev tutorials), @BeyondTheScreenn (tech commentary) — serve completely different audiences. If you want genuine cartoon adjacency, you'd need to look outside this auto-generated cluster and search for animation creators in B.MCartoon's specific language and style instead.

Is @B.MCartoon-k6q the biggest channel in their niche?

Within this comparison set, no — @Srifactual_Fact leads at 27,900 subs, roughly 67% larger than B.MCartoon-k6q's 16,700. But 'niche' is doing a lot of work in that question, because the five channels surfaced as similar don't actually share a niche. They share a sub-count tier (11K–28K) and mostly an Indian country signal. If you isolate to actual cartoon-style content creators on YouTube, B.MCartoon-k6q's competitive position can't be assessed from this data alone, because no animation channels appear in the similar-channel cluster pulled here.

What's the difference between @B.MCartoon-k6q and similar creators?

The mechanical differences show up in cadence and library size. @B.MCartoon-k6q sits at 239 videos for 16,700 subs (~70 subs per upload). For contrast: @Srifactual_Fact gets ~188 subs per video, @FAUJDARACADEMY only ~31, and @djtheminecrafter ~49. So B.MCartoon-k6q lands in the middle on per-video efficiency. The harder-to-quantify difference is positioning — most peers state clearly what they cover (Minecraft, RPSC exams, cloud, tech). B.MCartoon-k6q's public description is just a subscribe request, which makes both algorithmic placement and human discovery harder than it needs to be.

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