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Competitor comparison · @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212

@GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared

@GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 sits at 14,300 subs with 1,100 videos uploaded — Battle Royale content out of Bangladesh. Its closest real peer in this set is @FaishrCraft (13,700 subs, 999 videos, Pakistan-based Minecraft). The other four channels share sub counts but not niche, which is the interesting story here.

Channel data · captured May 17, 2026

Handle
@GAMINGWITHCJ-1212
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

honestly, looking at this competitor set is interesting because only one of these five channels is actually doing what @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 is doing. the scraper seems to have pulled channels in roughly the same subscriber band — 7K to 21K — but niche-wise it's all over the place. you've got minecraft, indian exam prep, a VPN brand account, hindi entertainment, and a b2b explainer studio. so the "competitor" frame here depends on what you mean by it: competing for the same battle royale viewers in south asia, or just sitting at a similar channel size on the platform.

@FaishrCraft (13,700 subs, 999 videos, pakistan) is the closest direct peer in the set. similar sub count, similar volume — they've put out 999 videos to @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212's 1,100, which is high-volume territory either way. but they're a minecraft channel, not battle royale, and their channel description is literally three words: "Subscribe For More Minecraft Videos." that minimalism tells you something — they're probably leaning on the thumbnail and minecraft search demand more than channel branding. for a battle royale creator, the overlap is audience age, regional proximity (pakistan/bangladesh), and shared gaming-content distribution patterns. if you watch @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 specifically for free fire or pubg mobile play, @FaishrCraft probably isn't your next click. if you're scouting south asian gaming creators in the 10-15K band, it absolutely is.

@Studywithmuksa (7,790 subs, 173 videos, india) is a completely different content category — competitive exam prep for indian students (BSTC, REET, PTET, LDC). the interesting data point: 7,790 subs across only 173 videos works out to roughly 45 subs per video, which is more than 3x @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212's ratio of about 13 per video. that's not a value judgment — exam prep audiences are smaller but stickier than battle royale audiences, and exam channels often have lower upload counts because each video can be 30+ minutes of teaching. they don't really compete with @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 for viewers. they're here because the channel size happens to be similar.

@Surfshark (20,800 subs, 456 videos, netherlands) is a corporate brand channel for a VPN product, not a creator channel — worth flagging because it changes how you read the comparison. their content is product demos, ads, and tech explainers aimed at a global b2c audience. it's a useful contrast actually: a brand with 20K subs after 456 videos is doing about 46 subs per video, which sounds efficient until you remember they have a paid marketing engine and a global product behind the channel. @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 has built 14K from scratch, presumably on organic reach plus livestream loyalty. different game entirely.

@SandhyaHits-h6m4v (10,000 subs, 509 videos, country unknown but content is hindi-language) is closer to @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 in feel than the corporate channels — it's a solo creator working in a vernacular language for a south asian audience. their bio is mostly thanks and appeals to share, consistent with smaller hindi-language entertainment channels that lean hard on community goodwill. they're not competing for the same eyeballs — gaming versus entertainment content — but they share something useful structurally: high upload count (509 videos for 10K subs) and an audience that's probably watching on mobile in patchy-connection environments. worth noting for any creator targeting similar viewers.

@whatastory (20,700 subs, 729 videos, united states) is a b2b explainer-video studio — they make demo videos for SaaS and AI companies as their service. so the channel is functionally a portfolio. 729 videos sounds like a lot until you realize their bio says they've produced "1100+ videos for 650+ global clients" — the channel is a tiny slice of their actual output. zero audience overlap with @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212. they're here purely because the sub count lands in a similar range. for a creator looking at competitor data, this one is mostly noise — useful as a reminder that "similar size" doesn't mean "similar business" or "similar audience."

if you watch @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212, the only channel in this set worth queuing up next is @FaishrCraft — same region, same broad gaming demographic, similar production scale. the rest tell you more about the limitations of grouping creators by subscriber count than about the bangladesh battle royale scene itself. for a more useful competitor scan, you'd want to filter for south asian gaming channels specifically — free fire creators, mobile-pubg creators, BGMI creators — in the 10-30K band. that's where the real audience competition is happening, not in this auto-pulled set.

Common questions

Who are @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212's biggest competitors on YouTube?

Based on this scraped competitor set, the closest direct peer is @FaishrCraft (13,700 subs, pakistan-based minecraft channel) — similar sub count, similar upload volume, same regional gaming-content space. The other channels in the set (@Studywithmuksa, @Surfshark, @SandhyaHits-h6m4v, @whatastory) match on channel size but not on niche. Honestly, the "real" competitor list for a bangladesh-based battle royale creator would be other south asian free fire and pubg mobile channels in the 10-30K range, which this particular auto-pull didn't surface fully. take this set as a size-matched comparison rather than a true niche map.

How does @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 compare to @FaishrCraft?

They're remarkably close on raw size — 14,300 subs vs 13,700, and 1,100 videos vs 999. Both work out to roughly 13-14 subscribers per video, which is on the lower end of efficiency and suggests both channels are publishing high volume to maintain visibility. The split is content: @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 is battle royale (likely free fire or pubg mobile out of bangladesh) and @FaishrCraft is minecraft out of pakistan. minecraft tends to have more evergreen search traffic than battle royale, which gets bigger live-stream spikes but less long-tail discovery. different distribution dynamics on top of similar surface metrics.

What channels should I watch alongside @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212?

From this set specifically, @FaishrCraft is the only one with genuine audience overlap — both are south asian gaming creators in the same sub band. If you're broader-minded about it and just like watching gaming creators with high upload volume, the 1,100-videos-at-14K-subs profile is pretty common in mobile gaming youtube, and you can find better matches by searching free fire bangladesh or pubg mobile bangladesh creators directly. the other four channels here (@Studywithmuksa, @Surfshark, @SandhyaHits-h6m4v, @whatastory) don't really fit alongside — they're not in the gaming category at all.

Is @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 the biggest channel in their niche?

No, and it's not close. battle royale gaming on youtube has channels in the millions of subs — free fire india creators alone include accounts in the 5-10M+ range. @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 at 14,300 subs is firmly in the small-to-mid creator tier. Even within this comparison set, @Surfshark and @whatastory have more subs (20,800 and 20,700 respectively), though as a VPN brand and a b2b video studio they're not really comparable. honest framing: @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 is a mid-size regional gaming creator who's been putting in serious volume (1,100 uploads), not a category leader.

What's the difference between @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 and similar creators?

The main observable difference is niche focus and region. @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 is a bangladesh-based battle royale creator who's leaning on livestreaming as part of the model — their bio describes them as "professional players and streamers." The competitor set this page surfaced is mostly size-matched rather than niche-matched: only @FaishrCraft is a fellow gaming creator. The structural similarity across most of them is high video count relative to subs — except @Studywithmuksa, which has way fewer uploads (173) for its sub count, which is what an education channel typically looks like compared to a gaming one.

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