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Competitor comparison · @Bobykgrow

@Bobykgrow Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Growth Channels Compared

@Bobykgrow (29,700 subs, 35 videos) sits in the Hindi-language YouTube-growth-tips space, where the closest peers by audience size are @Toppscholars (29,200 subs) and @sameer_dramaa (27,500 subs). The key differentiator is video volume — Bobykgrow runs an unusually lean 35-video catalog while most rivals sit in the hundreds or thousands.

Channel data · captured May 14, 2026

Handle
@Bobykgrow
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

The five channels pulled as comparable to @Bobykgrow share one thing — they're all India-coded (except @MilanSinghhh) and they're all hunting the same loose audience of Hindi-speaking viewers who want to make something of themselves on the internet. But the overlap gets thin fast once you look at what they actually upload. Bobykgrow is specifically a YouTube-growth-advice channel in Hindi. Toppscholars teaches academics. Jodff27 plays Free Fire. The audiences brush against each other on the algorithm but they aren't really watching the same playlists.

@Toppscholars (29,200 subs, 1,500 videos, India) is the closest in raw subscriber count but the furthest in content philosophy. They've uploaded 1,500 videos to get to roughly the same place Bobykgrow reached in 35 — that's a 43x volume ratio. So the comparison says something interesting about both: Toppscholars is grinding educational SEO content for students, betting on long-tail search; Bobykgrow seems to be betting on each individual video carrying real weight. A creator should follow Toppscholars if they want to see what high-volume study-content distribution looks like in 2026. Follow Bobykgrow if they want the meta-commentary on how that volume game works.

@Jodff27 (31,200 subs, 176 videos, India) is technically the largest channel in this set and the contrast is sharp — it's pure Free Fire gameplay content with a stated 50K target. The reason it shows up next to Bobykgrow is probably audience-overlap: the same young Indian YouTube viewer watches gaming creators and growth creators on the same phone. Jodff27's 176-video count is more than 5x Bobykgrow's, but still lean for gaming. Worth watching if you want to see how a niche gaming channel handles audience-building publicly. Less useful as a direct content reference.

@MilanSinghhh (46,500 subs, 1,200 videos, US) is the outlier — the only non-India channel and the largest by subs. The bio describes a personal-brand creator covering entrepreneurship, e-commerce, and self-made-millionaire content. That's adjacent to Bobykgrow's YouTube-growth angle but not the same thing. Milan is selling a lifestyle and the strategies that built it; Bobykgrow is selling the YouTube tactic specifically. A creator targeting English-speaking audiences would learn more from Milan's catalog. A creator working Hindi-first should treat Milan as a benchmark for production polish, not a direct competitor for views.

@sameer_dramaa (27,500 subs, 1,000 videos, India) is honestly a strange fit in this set — the bio reads as a product/affiliate channel ("Daily Deals & Viral Products", "Best Budget Shopping Page"). 1,000 videos at 27.5K subs suggests they're churning Shorts-style review content. The reason the algorithm clusters them with Bobykgrow is probably the shared Hindi-speaking Indian audience plus the implicit "make money online" theme. Different lane, similar viewer profile. Not a direct competitive threat but worth noting if you're studying how affiliate-content channels pace uploads.

@Ali_Wealth (26,900 subs, 92 videos, India) is the most direct competitor for Bobykgrow's actual brand. Hindi-language, finance/wealth-mindset focused, lean catalog (92 videos), similar sub count. The teaching tone in the bio — "Rich Mindset, Smart Saving, Wealth Creation, Stock Market Basics" — mirrors Bobykgrow's instructional framing, just pointed at money instead of YouTube. Same audience demographic, same upload philosophy of fewer/heavier videos. A Hindi-speaking viewer who watches Bobykgrow for income-from-YouTube content is statistically the same person who watches Ali_Wealth for income-from-investing content. This one's the real competitor.

If you watch @Bobykgrow, you should probably also be checking @Ali_Wealth for the closest content philosophy, @Toppscholars for the volume-vs-curation contrast, and @MilanSinghhh if you want to see what the same general theme looks like when it scales internationally. The other two are useful context for understanding the audience but they're not really in the same content lane.

Common questions

Who are @Bobykgrow's biggest competitors on YouTube?

By subscriber count, @Jodff27 (31,200 subs) and @Toppscholars (29,200 subs) are the closest peers. But subscriber count and actual competition are different things. The most directly comparable channel by content philosophy is @Ali_Wealth — also Hindi-language, also a lean catalog (92 videos), also an instructional/teaching format. The largest channel in this comparable set is @MilanSinghhh at 46,500 subs, though Milan operates in English and from the US, so the audience overlap with Bobykgrow's 29,700 Hindi-speaking subscribers is probably smaller than the raw similarity score suggests.

How does @Bobykgrow compare to @Toppscholars?

Sub counts are nearly identical — Bobykgrow at 29,700, Toppscholars at 29,200. The interesting part is how they got there. Toppscholars has uploaded 1,500 videos; Bobykgrow has uploaded 35. That's a 43x difference in catalog size for roughly the same audience. Toppscholars is playing a high-volume educational SEO game, banking on long-tail search traffic for student-focused content. Bobykgrow appears to be running a lean approach where each video is meant to carry weight on its own. Same destination, completely different roads.

What channels should I watch alongside @Bobykgrow?

If the goal is studying YouTube-growth strategy in Hindi, the closest content-philosophy match is @Ali_Wealth (26,900 subs, 92 videos) — different topic but identical teaching format and audience. For volume-game perspective, @Toppscholars (29,200 subs, 1,500 videos) is the opposite playbook. For international comparison, @MilanSinghhh (46,500 subs, US-based) shows what the entrepreneurship-and-self-improvement angle looks like at a larger English-speaking scale. The other two — Jodff27 and sameer_dramaa — sit further from the core content lane but share audience demographics.

Is @Bobykgrow the biggest channel in their niche?

No. In this competitor set, @MilanSinghhh leads at 46,500 subs and @Jodff27 sits at 31,200. Bobykgrow's 29,700 puts them in the middle. But "niche" matters — among the channels actually doing Hindi-language YouTube-growth instruction, the data here is thinner because the comparison set spans gaming, academics, affiliate, and finance content. Among the closest content-philosophy peer (@Ali_Wealth at 26,900), Bobykgrow is slightly larger. It's not the biggest channel in the comparable set, but it's not far behind, and its 35-video catalog suggests each upload is doing meaningful work.

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

The clearest difference is video volume relative to subs. Bobykgrow has 35 videos for 29,700 subscribers — roughly 850 subs earned per upload. Compare that to Toppscholars (1,500 videos, ~19 subs per upload) or sameer_dramaa (1,000 videos, ~28 per upload). That's a different operating model entirely. Bobykgrow is closer to Ali_Wealth's approach (92 videos, ~292 subs per upload). Could be coincidence given the small sample, but the lean-catalog Hindi-instructional pattern shows up in both channels and might reflect a real audience preference in that segment for fewer, longer-form teaching videos over churn.

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