Grow Creator
Competitor comparison · @DramaDrop-agasdg

@DramaDrop-agasdg Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared

Free creator diagnostic

Run a free YouTube channel audit on your own channel

Paste your channel handle and get a free read of the bottleneck holding back your Shorts, uploads, or channel positioning. No signup and no card for the first read.

@DramaDrop-agasdg (2,390 subs, 140 videos) sits in the same micro-channel tier as @codingoblin (2,380 subs) and @HeyMythX (3,150 subs). The clearest differentiator is upload volume — DramaDrop has shipped 140 videos to codingoblin's 128, while @Anjana.ar. has cleared 2,300.

Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026

Handle
@DramaDrop-agasdg
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

Honestly, the first thing worth flagging: @DramaDrop-agasdg's public description is just 'More about this channel,' which is what YouTube shows when the creator hasn't filled in a bio. That makes external positioning hard to read. The competitor set the algorithm surfaces is unusually scattered — a UK indie-business channel, two India-based creators, and two handles ending in 'FN' (almost certainly Fortnite). When YouTube's related-channel signal pulls a set this mixed, it usually means the source channel doesn't have a tightly readable niche yet, or that 140 videos haven't all been pointed at the same audience. That's the lens I'd use reading this comparison.

@codingoblin (2,380 subs, 128 videos, UK) is the closest peer by raw numbers — basically a statistical twin of DramaDrop on subs and upload count. Their bio is the most specific in this set: 'Building real online businesses. Follow along for the wins, the flops, and the real numbers.' That's a clear indie-hacker / online-business angle. If DramaDrop's content overlaps with codingoblin in YouTube's eyes, the shared audience signal is probably entrepreneurship-curious viewers under 35. Follow codingoblin if you want the transparent-numbers, build-in-public format. Skip if drama or short-form is what you came for. The matched sub count between these two is the most genuinely useful data point on this page — they're growing in lockstep.

@HeyMythX (3,150 subs, 76 videos, India) has the highest sub-per-video ratio in this set — roughly 41 subs per upload, against DramaDrop's 17. That's worth pausing on. A creator getting 2.4x more subs per video typically means either stronger retention, a more searchable topic, or a tighter niche. The bio gives nothing away ('More about this channel'), so this is inference. India-based creators in this sub band often run gaming, tech-explainer, or mythology/lore content — the handle 'MythX' suggests the latter. Follow them if you're interested in the lower-cadence, higher-yield approach to channel building. The pattern here is the opposite of Anjana.ar.'s grind-it-out approach below.

@ZyfernoFN (3,620 subs, 44 videos) is the biggest channel on this list and the most efficient — 82 subs per upload, nearly 5x DramaDrop's ratio. The 'FN' suffix is Fortnite-creator convention, and 44 videos with 3.6K subs reads like short-form gaming clips where one or two hit the algorithm. The country field is blank, which is common for gaming creators who don't bother filling it in. If DramaDrop is being clustered alongside @ZyfernoFN by YouTube, there's a reasonable chance some of DramaDrop's content is gaming-adjacent — or the algorithm is matching on viewer demographic rather than topic. Follow ZyfernoFN if Fortnite shorts are your thing; otherwise this is a weak overlap.

@SmylesFN (1,260 subs, 534 videos, US) is the only competitor smaller than DramaDrop and by far the most prolific — 534 uploads is almost 4x DramaDrop's 140. Their bio is the realest one in this set: hard of hearing, heart condition, Fortnite player making short edits. That's a specific creator identity. Sub-per-video here is 2.4, the lowest of the group, which is what happens when you upload daily shorts and most don't break out. They're the same niche as ZyfernoFN by topic but a totally different strategy — volume over polish. Watch them if you like Fortnite shorts with a personal-story layer. The cadence gap between these two FN channels is the sharpest contrast in the whole set.

@Anjana.ar. (2,680 subs, 2,300 videos, India) is the outlier — 2,300 uploads for 2,680 subs works out to almost exactly 1 sub per video. The bio is Hindi and lists acting, dance, folk songs, devotional content. This is the highest-volume, lowest-yield channel on the list, and the overlap with DramaDrop is almost certainly demographic rather than topical. Channels at this video count typically post short clips of family events, regional music, or short skits. Worth flagging because if DramaDrop is being clustered next to Anjana.ar. at all, that's a hint DramaDrop might be uploading shorts in volume too. Don't follow this one for DramaDrop-adjacent content unless you specifically want Hindi-language regional video.

If you watch @DramaDrop-agasdg, the highest-signal next follow is probably @codingoblin — matched sub count, matched upload count, and codingoblin actually tells you what they're about. After that, @HeyMythX is worth watching just to see what a more efficient upload strategy looks like in this sub band. The two FN channels and Anjana.ar. are useful as contrast cases more than as additions to a watch queue. The bigger takeaway: a clearer channel description would probably tighten DramaDrop's competitor set considerably. Right now the algorithm is guessing, and the guesses are scattered.

Common questions

Who are @DramaDrop-agasdg's biggest competitors on YouTube?

The closest peers by raw numbers are @codingoblin (2,380 subs, 128 videos) and @HeyMythX (3,150 subs, 76 videos). @codingoblin is the statistical twin — nearly identical sub count and upload count, with a clear indie-business angle. @HeyMythX is bigger in audience but uploaded about half as much, suggesting either better topic-market fit or stronger retention. The wider competitor set includes @ZyfernoFN (Fortnite-adjacent), @SmylesFN (Fortnite shorts), and @Anjana.ar. (Hindi-language content), which honestly reads like an algorithm casting a wide net rather than a tightly defined niche around DramaDrop.

How does @DramaDrop-agasdg compare to @codingoblin?

They're nearly identical on paper — DramaDrop has 2,390 subs and 140 videos, codingoblin has 2,380 subs and 128 videos. Both are growing in the small-creator tier. The real difference is positioning: codingoblin's bio clearly stakes out 'building real online businesses' as their lane, while DramaDrop's bio is the default 'More about this channel' placeholder. If you're choosing between them as a viewer, codingoblin is the easier follow because you know exactly what you're getting. A vague description doesn't kill a channel, but it does make competitor analysis from outside basically guesswork.

What channels should I watch alongside @DramaDrop-agasdg?

From this list, the strongest add is @codingoblin — same sub band, same upload cadence, and clear topic signaling. @HeyMythX is the second-best pick if you want to see what a more efficient upload-to-sub ratio looks like at 76 videos for 3.1K subs. The Fortnite channels (@ZyfernoFN at 3,620 subs, @SmylesFN at 1,260) are only worth adding if your watch history skews gaming. @Anjana.ar. is in a different language and content tradition. Honestly, the answer depends on what DramaDrop is actually posting — without a clear description, this is inference from the surrounding cluster.

Is @DramaDrop-agasdg the biggest channel in their niche?

No. In this competitor set, @ZyfernoFN leads at 3,620 subs, followed by @HeyMythX at 3,150 and @Anjana.ar. at 2,680. DramaDrop's 2,390 puts them mid-pack. Only @SmylesFN (1,260) is smaller. Worth noting these are all in the same micro-tier — under 4K subs — so 'biggest' is a relative term. The real differences are in efficiency: @ZyfernoFN got there in 44 videos, while @Anjana.ar. needed 2,300 uploads. DramaDrop's 140 uploads for 2,390 subs is roughly mid-range efficiency in this comparison.

What's the difference between @DramaDrop-agasdg and similar creators?

The starkest difference is description clarity. Three channels on this list (DramaDrop, HeyMythX, ZyfernoFN) all show YouTube's default 'More about this channel' placeholder bio — that's a missed positioning opportunity at any size. @codingoblin, @SmylesFN, and @Anjana.ar. all wrote real bios, and you can immediately understand what they're about. Beyond bios, the upload patterns vary wildly: from 44 videos to 2,300. DramaDrop's 140 puts them solidly in the middle. Sub counts cluster between 1,260 and 3,620, so this whole set is in roughly the same growth stage.

Free creator diagnostic

Run a free YouTube channel audit on your own channel

Paste your channel handle and get a free read of the bottleneck holding back your Shorts, uploads, or channel positioning. No signup and no card for the first read.