@CYQ-Anime Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Analyzed
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@CYQ-Anime (39,800 subs, Taiwan) doesn't have a clean head-to-head competitor in this scraped set — closest by sub size are @GuillaumeMoubeche (48K) and @interactivegameplay (37K). The real overlap is structural: high-volume uploaders chasing watch-time loops, not topical anime overlap.
Channel data · captured Jun 25, 2026
- Handle
- @CYQ-Anime
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
Here's the honest framing before we go competitor-by-competitor: the scraped set you'd normally compare @CYQ-Anime against isn't a tight niche match. @CYQ-Anime runs a Chinese-language anime recap / 爽漫 channel — power-fantasy clips, daily uploads, 2,600 videos against 39,800 subs. That's a roughly 15:1 video-to-sub ratio, which tells you almost everything about the format: volume-driven, algorithm-fed, low per-video sub conversion. The competitors below share that *behavior pattern* (high upload, recap/clip style, mid-tier sub count) more than they share the actual anime topic. Worth flagging upfront so nobody reading this thinks @Khushi_lifejourney is suddenly going to start posting 神豪 recaps.
@Khushi_lifejourney (73,300 subs, 180 videos, India) is the largest channel in this set by subs but the smallest by upload volume — a 407:1 sub-to-video ratio, basically the inverse of @CYQ-Anime. She's running a personal/motivation channel with stylized Unicode text in the description (always a signal of an India-region motivation/lifestyle creator). The interesting read: she's getting roughly 1.8x the subs of @CYQ-Anime with under 7% of the upload count. Completely different bet. Follow her if you want a study in low-volume / high-conversion personality-driven growth. Follow @CYQ-Anime if you're researching scaled clip pipelines.
@DailyEnglishWithTejas (33,200 subs, 196 videos, India) is the closest cadence comparison in this set — sub count is within 17% of @CYQ-Anime but with a tiny library. Hindi-to-English instructional content, very clear value prop in the description. The data point worth sitting with: 33K subs on 196 videos is a 170:1 ratio, roughly 25x more efficient per-upload than @CYQ-Anime. Different game entirely. Educational creators get bookmarked and re-watched; anime recap channels get scrolled past after one view. If you're @CYQ-Anime and looking at Tejas's numbers thinking "why does he convert", the answer is search intent — people search "how to learn English in Hindi", nobody searches for a specific 爽漫 recap.
@thesuperhitreaction (24,900 subs, 200 videos, country unknown) is the smallest channel here and the hardest to read — the description is literally "create ! Laugh ! recreate :". Reaction content, presumably. It's the only channel in the set sitting *below* @CYQ-Anime in subs, and on a comparable video count to Tejas (200 vs 196) but with 25% fewer subs. Worth watching if you want to see what underperformance looks like in a similar format bracket. Honestly though, with no country tag and a one-line description, there's not much signal to pull here.
@interactivegameplay (37,000 subs, 1,100 videos, Algeria) is the only other high-volume uploader in the set and the most behaviorally similar to @CYQ-Anime. Both are mid-tier sub counts (within 8% of each other) carrying massive libraries — 30:1 video-to-sub for @interactivegameplay vs 15:1 for @CYQ-Anime. Gaming let's-plays follow the same daily-upload logic as anime recap channels: low effort per upload, betting on the algorithm to surface backcatalog. If you're studying the recap/clip business model, this is the cleanest sibling case in the set, even though the content has zero topical overlap.
@GuillaumeMoubeche (48,000 subs, 575 videos, US) is the outlier. Founder-led business content, US-based, talks about selling 20% of lemlist for $30m. Completely different audience — B2B SaaS founders, not anime viewers. He's the largest channel by subs (~20% bigger than @CYQ-Anime) but the comparison ends there. Included here because the scraper grouped him in, not because there's a real overlap. Skip unless you're researching creator-led B2B content.
If you watch @CYQ-Anime, the only channel in this set with even loose behavioral overlap is @interactivegameplay — same daily-upload algorithm-fed model, just gaming instead of anime. Everyone else is in a different game entirely. Real competitors for @CYQ-Anime are other Chinese-language anime recap channels, which aren't in this scraped set. Treat this page as a behavioral comparison, not a topical one.
Common questions
Who are @CYQ-Anime's biggest competitors on YouTube?
In this scraped set, the closest competitors by sub count are @GuillaumeMoubeche (48,000 subs) and @interactivegameplay (37,000 subs) — both within ~20% of @CYQ-Anime's 39,800. But sub count alone is misleading. Behaviorally, @interactivegameplay is the only real comparison: high upload volume (1,100 videos), mid-tier subs, algorithm-fed format. Topically, none of these are real anime-recap competitors. The actual competition for @CYQ-Anime sits in the Chinese-language 爽漫 recap space, which this scrape didn't surface.
How does @CYQ-Anime compare to @Khushi_lifejourney?
They're inverse cases. @Khushi_lifejourney has 73,300 subs on 180 videos — roughly 407 subs per upload. @CYQ-Anime has 39,800 subs on 2,600 videos — about 15 subs per upload. That's a ~27x efficiency gap. @Khushi_lifejourney runs a low-volume personal/motivation channel (India region, lifestyle content). @CYQ-Anime runs a high-volume Chinese-language anime recap pipeline. They're not competing for the same viewer or the same algorithm slot. Different language, different format, different growth model. Useful comparison only if you're studying conversion efficiency.
What channels should I watch alongside @CYQ-Anime?
From this scraped set, honestly only @interactivegameplay (37,000 subs, 1,100 videos, Algeria) makes sense as a co-watch — same high-volume recap behavior, gaming instead of anime. The other four channels in the comparison set (motivation, English teaching, reactions, B2B SaaS) don't overlap with @CYQ-Anime's audience at all. If you're a viewer specifically looking for more Chinese-language 爽漫 content, you'd be better served searching directly for 神豪 or 爽漫 keywords on YouTube rather than relying on this competitor list.
Is @CYQ-Anime the biggest channel in their niche?
Can't tell from this data. In the scraped competitor set, @CYQ-Anime ranks 3rd by subs (39,800) — behind @Khushi_lifejourney (73,300) and @GuillaumeMoubeche (48,000), ahead of @interactivegameplay, @DailyEnglishWithTejas, and @thesuperhitreaction. But none of those are in the same niche as @CYQ-Anime, so the ranking is meaningless topically. The Chinese-language anime recap space has channels well into the hundreds of thousands of subs that aren't represented here. @CYQ-Anime is mid-tier within their actual niche, not a leader.
What's the difference between @CYQ-Anime and similar creators?
Two structural differences stand out. First, upload volume: @CYQ-Anime has 2,600 videos — more than double @interactivegameplay (1,100) and 14x @Khushi_lifejourney (180). Second, language and region: @CYQ-Anime is Taiwan-based, Chinese-language, anime-focused; the rest of this set is India, US, Algeria, English-language, completely different verticals. The shared trait across the high-volume ones (@CYQ-Anime, @interactivegameplay) is a recap/clip business model that bets on backcatalog discovery. The low-volume ones bet on per-video conversion.
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