@DailyEnglishWithTejas Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared
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@DailyEnglishWithTejas sits at 33,200 subscribers across 196 uploads, grouped algorithmically with @TopGames10 (37,100 subs) and @interactivegameplay (37,000 subs). The real differentiator is upload restraint — Tejas runs roughly 170 subs per video, while @interactivegameplay sits closer to 33 across 1,100 uploads.
Channel data · captured Jun 25, 2026
- Handle
- @DailyEnglishWithTejas
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
The "similar channels" set surfaced for @DailyEnglishWithTejas is genuinely mixed — only one clear topical neighbor (which we'll get to), and the rest sit nearby on sub count or India geography rather than niche. Worth flagging up front: if you're scouting actual English-learning competitors, this set won't surface them all. What it does show is the band of mid-tier creators (roughly 20K-50K subs) YouTube's algorithm groups with Tejas based on viewing overlap. That's its own signal — viewers of a Hindi-to-English channel also watch gaming and business content, which matters for thumbnail tests and topic ladder planning.
@thesuperhitreaction (24,900 subs, 200 videos) is the closest match on output volume. Tejas has 196 uploads, so the cadence is nearly identical. The content angle is completely different — reaction/laugh content versus structured Hindi-to-English teaching — but if you're studying Tejas's growth, this is the best peer for benchmarking thumbnail design for a similarly-sized entertainment-skewed audience. The 200-video count over an unknown timeline suggests roughly weekly cadence, matching Tejas. Follow them less for content cues, more for how a creator at exactly Tejas's stage handles channel-page conversion.
@interactivegameplay (37,000 subs, 1,100 videos, Algeria) is where the upload-volume tell gets loud. They've shipped 5-6x more videos than Tejas for roughly the same sub count. At 1,100 videos for 37,000 subs, that's about 33 subs per video. Tejas sits at 33,200 subs across 196 videos — roughly 170 subs per video. That's a 5x per-upload efficiency gap, which says Tejas's content works much harder per shipped piece. Not a comp to study for tactics, but a useful contrast for anyone tempted to chase volume over depth in 2026.
@GuillaumeMoubeche (48,000 subs, 575 videos, US) is the largest channel in the set. He's a founder talking about scaling lemlist past a $30M exit — personal-brand business content, totally outside the language-learning lane. Geographically US, topically entrepreneurship. The reason this surfaced is probably language overlap: he speaks English, and his audience overlaps with people learning English to access business content. If you're Tejas, the watch here is hook structure — how Guillaume opens videos with a number, a stake, a question — those frames translate cleanly to English-learning content where the first 15 seconds are everything.
@codebrewappdevelopment (21,800 subs, 594 videos, US) is the smallest channel here. App-development agency content. Same observation as @interactivegameplay applies — high upload count, low subs-per-video ratio (~37). Worth looking at for one specific thing: their description leads with positioning ("trusted partner in digital transformation"), which is the kind of clear hook Tejas could borrow on the channel page. The current Tejas description leans on emoji and a features list — fine, but a sharper top-line claim about *outcomes* (not features) probably lifts the subscribe rate from cold visits.
@TopGames10 (37,100 subs, 530 videos, India) is the only other India-based channel in this set, and probably the most useful real comp. Owner is named (Pratik Milind Nihite) — the same personal-positioning approach Tejas already uses. Gaming content focused on low-end PC users — different topic, but a very similar audience archetype: Indian viewers looking for practical, accessible content in a budget-conscious frame. If Tejas wants to study how a fellow Indian creator converts viewers to subs at this exact size, this is the only direct demographic peer in the algorithmic neighborhood.
If you watch @DailyEnglishWithTejas, the most useful adjacent watches are honestly outside this set — real Hindi-to-English channels would be the topical comps, and the algorithm didn't surface those (could be that Tejas's audience watches broadly rather than concentrating in the niche, which is its own interesting data point). From this list specifically: @TopGames10 for audience demographics, @GuillaumeMoubeche for hook structure, and @thesuperhitreaction for stage-matched cadence. Tejas's real edge versus this group is upload restraint — 196 videos for 33,200 subs is a strong ratio, and it suggests the teaching format does the lifting.
Common questions
Who are @DailyEnglishWithTejas's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Based on YouTube's algorithmic similarity grouping, the closest channels are @TopGames10 (37,100 subs, India), @interactivegameplay (37,000 subs, Algeria), and @GuillaumeMoubeche (48,000 subs, US). Worth being honest though — these aren't direct content competitors. Only @TopGames10 shares Tejas's country, and none teach English. They're grouped by audience viewing overlap, not topical match. The closest stage-matched channel is @thesuperhitreaction at 24,900 subs with 200 videos (Tejas has 196), which makes it the best size-and-cadence comp even with different content.
How does @DailyEnglishWithTejas compare to @thesuperhitreaction?
These two are surprisingly close on the structural side. Tejas has 33,200 subs across 196 videos; @thesuperhitreaction has 24,900 subs across 200 videos. Almost identical upload counts, suggesting similar weekly cadence. The gap is content type — Tejas teaches Hindi-to-English daily phrases, @thesuperhitreaction runs reaction-style entertainment. Tejas has the better subs-per-video ratio (~170 vs ~125), which signals teaching content retains and converts viewers more efficiently per upload than reaction content at this size. Useful comp for cadence benchmarking, not for content strategy.
What channels should I watch alongside @DailyEnglishWithTejas?
From the algorithmic similar set, the most useful watches are @TopGames10 if you want to see how another Indian creator at the same size handles audience conversion, and @GuillaumeMoubeche if you're interested in English-language hook structures (his videos open with stakes, numbers, questions — frames that work for language teaching too). Honestly, the algorithmic neighbors don't include other Hindi-to-English channels, so if that's the niche you care about, you'll need to search those directly. The list here reflects viewing overlap, not topical overlap.
Is @DailyEnglishWithTejas the biggest channel in their niche?
Within the surfaced similar set, no — @GuillaumeMoubeche leads at 48,000 subs, followed by @TopGames10 at 37,100 and @interactivegameplay at 37,000. Tejas sits at 33,200 in the middle of the pack. But none of those are language-learning channels, so this comparison is really about general mid-tier YouTube positioning, not niche dominance. Inside the actual Hindi-to-English teaching niche on YouTube there are much larger players the algorithm didn't surface here. Tejas is a strong mid-tier creator in the broader band, not a niche leader by this data.
What's the difference between @DailyEnglishWithTejas and similar creators?
The clearest difference is upload efficiency. Tejas runs about 170 subs per video (33,200 subs / 196 videos). Compare that to @interactivegameplay at ~33 subs per video (1,100 uploads) or @codebrewappdevelopment at ~37 (594 uploads). Only @GuillaumeMoubeche at ~83 is in the same neighborhood. That suggests Tejas's teaching format compounds well per upload — each video carries more weight. The tradeoff: lower total reach footprint than channels that ship volume. Tejas's restraint is the differentiator worth studying.
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