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Competitor comparison · @DeadlyDanger07

@DeadlyDanger07 Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared

@DeadlyDanger07 (15,100 subs, 1,100 videos) competes most directly with @gwynblade3378 (13,700 subs) and @tedskii (15,100 subs) for the gaming-content audience. The clearest differentiator: DeadlyDanger07 has shipped 1,100 videos to tedskii's 37 — a roughly 30x volume gap that points to two completely different content strategies.

Channel data · captured May 21, 2026

Handle
@DeadlyDanger07
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

the niche here is gaming creators, mostly mobile and FPS-adjacent, sitting in the 9K-17K sub band. that's a specific tier — big enough to be past the algorithm cold-start, small enough that one decent video still moves the needle. @DeadlyDanger07 brands itself as the "official creator of scarfall 2.0," which is a battle royale title popular in India, and that single-game focus is what most distinguishes them from the broader gaming channels in this set. when you pin yourself to one IP, you live and die with that IP's playerbase. worth noting.

@gwynblade3378 (13,700 subs, 366 videos, also India-based) is probably the closest peer in raw shape. similar sub count, similar region, broader gaming framing — their bio talks about "thrilling gameplay, in-depth discussions, and the latest gaming news" rather than a single title. they've shipped 366 videos which is roughly a third of DeadlyDanger's output, meaning DeadlyDanger is grinding way more uploads for a marginal sub advantage. could be that gwynblade's per-video performance is just better, or that they started later. either way, a creator should follow gwynblade if they want to see what a more diversified India-gaming positioning looks like at the same scale.

@tedskii (15,100 subs, 37 videos, United States) is the weird one and honestly the most interesting datapoint in the set. exact same subscriber count as DeadlyDanger07. 37 videos total. that's a sub-per-video ratio of around 408 vs DeadlyDanger's ~14. i can't see retention or view counts from outside, but a number like that usually means either one viral hit carrying the channel or a very different content style — longer, more produced pieces maybe. the bio is sparse to the point of being odd (just a business email repeated). follow tedskii if you're trying to understand low-volume/high-yield gaming content, which is the opposite of what DeadlyDanger is doing.

@LostSavePoint9 (17,400 subs, 315 videos, US) is the biggest channel in this comparison set and the most clearly differentiated by content angle. their bio is specific in a way the others aren't: "gaming secrets, hidden locations, developer details, and Easter eggs." that's an evergreen-search format — the kind of video that picks up views years after upload because someone googles "hidden room in [game]." DeadlyDanger's scarfall focus is much more dependent on the game being currently active. follow LostSavePoint9 to study how a gaming creator builds a library that compounds over time rather than chasing the patch cycle.

@exilas8699 (10,000 subs, 2,000 videos, country unlisted) is the volume outlier going the other direction. two thousand videos against ten thousand subs is a brutal ratio, and the channel is laser-focused on "weapon showcases and reload animations across Call of Duty and other top-tier FPS games." that's a format play — short, repeatable, probably template-driven. you upload a reload animation for every new gun in every new patch, forever. DeadlyDanger's 1,100 videos suddenly look restrained by comparison. worth following if you want to see what happens when you commit fully to one micro-format inside FPS.

@mariwithteas (9,240 subs, 216 videos, Brazil) is the odd-one-out in this set and i'd actually argue they're not a real competitor — the bio describes "a cozy soul romanticizing her study days," which is study-with-me / lifestyle, not gaming. they probably got pulled in by some sub-count or upload-pattern similarity in the scraper. mentioning them here because it's useful to know what the algorithm thinks is adjacent even when it isn't. a scarfall viewer is not crossing over to study aesthetic content. if anything this confirms that the real competitor set is the other four.

if you watch @DeadlyDanger07, the most natural also-watches are @gwynblade3378 for the same regional gaming flavor at similar scale, and @LostSavePoint9 if you want gaming content that doesn't depend on whether a specific battle royale is still trending. @exilas8699 is interesting for the FPS overlap if you care about weapon-focused content specifically. @tedskii is worth a look just to see a 37-video channel sitting at the same sub count, which raises real questions about whether DeadlyDanger's upload volume is actually doing what they think it's doing.

Common questions

Who are @DeadlyDanger07's biggest competitors on YouTube?

Based on the live competitor scrape, the closest peers are @gwynblade3378 (13,700 subs, India, gaming) and @tedskii (15,100 subs, US, gaming with only 37 videos). @LostSavePoint9 (17,400 subs) is the biggest in the comparison set and the only one currently above DeadlyDanger07 in sub count. @exilas8699 (10,000 subs) overlaps on FPS content. @mariwithteas got pulled into the scrape but is study-with-me content and shouldn't really count as a competitor.

How does @DeadlyDanger07 compare to @gwynblade3378?

They're remarkably similar on paper — both India-based gaming channels, 13-15K subs, both in the same general tier. The key difference is upload volume and focus. DeadlyDanger07 has 1,100 videos centered on scarfall 2.0 specifically. Gwynblade has 366 videos with a broader "gaming news and discussions" framing. So Gwynblade is doing roughly a third of the uploads for a similar sub count, which suggests either better per-video performance or a later start. Different bets on the same audience.

What channels should I watch alongside @DeadlyDanger07?

If you like DeadlyDanger07's scarfall and India-gaming flavor, @gwynblade3378 is the most natural also-watch — same region, similar scale, broader scope. @LostSavePoint9 (17,400 subs) is great if you want gaming content that's more about secrets and easter eggs than current-meta gameplay. @exilas8699 is worth a look if you specifically care about FPS weapon content. @tedskii is harder to recommend without knowing more — 37 videos at 15K subs is an unusual profile that could mean almost anything.

Is @DeadlyDanger07 the biggest channel in their niche?

Not quite. In this competitor set of five, @LostSavePoint9 sits at 17,400 subs, putting DeadlyDanger07 (15,100) in second place. @tedskii ties at 15,100, @gwynblade3378 is at 13,700, and @exilas8699 trails at 10,000. So DeadlyDanger07 is in the upper half of this peer group but not the top. The bigger question is positioning — being the "official creator of scarfall 2.0" is a much narrower claim than what most of these channels stake out, which can be a strength or a ceiling depending on the game's trajectory.

What's the difference between @DeadlyDanger07 and similar creators?

Two things stand out. First, single-game focus: DeadlyDanger07 is explicitly built around scarfall 2.0, where peers like @LostSavePoint9 and @gwynblade3378 cover gaming more broadly. Second, upload volume: 1,100 videos is high relative to most of the set — only @exilas8699 (2,000 videos for 10K subs) is shipping more. @tedskii is the opposite extreme with just 37 videos at the same 15.1K subs. So DeadlyDanger07 is grinding hard inside a narrow lane, which is a defensible strategy as long as that game stays active.

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