@GameWardTV Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared (2026)
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@GameWardTV (18,500 subs, France) sits in a strange comparison set — closest by audience size are @B.MCartoon-k6q (16,700 subs) and @tradethepool (14,500 subs), but neither shares the esports-team niche. The key differentiator: GameWardTV is a brand channel for a French esports org, not a solo creator.
Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026
- Handle
- @GameWardTV
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
Honestly, the algorithm's idea of "similar" gets weird when a channel is small and niche. @GameWardTV is the YouTube arm of GameWard, a French esports organization, with 414 videos against 18,500 subscribers. The five channels grouped against it span US gaming, Indian trading education, Indian stock tutorials, and a cartoon channel. They're not direct niche competitors so much as channels in a similar sub range (roughly 9K to 26K) that YouTube's recommendation graph occasionally surfaces. Worth acknowledging upfront, because comparing a French esports brand against a US glitch-hunter is more useful as a benchmark study than as a "who's your rival" exercise.
@SuperZeplay (11,700 subs, US) is the closest thing in this set to GameWardTV's gaming DNA — gameplay, tips, glitches. But the video math is rough: 826 uploads against 11,700 subs is about 14 subs earned per video, while GameWardTV's 414 uploads against 18,500 subs lands closer to 45. Different content economies. Zeplay grinds high-volume short gameplay clips; GameWardTV publishes less frequently but each upload tends to pull more weight, probably because the team brand attracts dedicated fans rather than algorithmic discovery. Worth following for a creator studying volume-driven gaming channels.
@DailyperfectClasses (26,100 subs, India) is actually the biggest channel in this set and has nothing to do with esports — it's a tutorial channel by someone called Deepak. The reason it's here is probably sub-count proximity. What's interesting: 1,500 videos for 26,100 subs (~17 subs per video) reflects the educational grind — high frequency, modest per-video yield, evergreen catalog. Not a competitor in any real sense, but a useful contrast. GameWardTV gets more pull per upload because esports content has spike potential (tournament results, roster news), while tutorial channels accrete subs slowly across hundreds of search-driven videos.
@tradethepool (14,500 subs, US) is a brand channel for a prop-firm trading service. Like GameWardTV, it's not a personal creator — it's a company. That's actually the most relevant overlap in the entire set: both are organization-run channels rather than solo creators, both lean on content to support a broader brand. Tradethepool's 1,600 videos against 14,500 subs is ~9 subs per video, which is brutal but typical for finance content where viewers churn fast. If you run an esports org and want to study how a non-creator brand handles YouTube as a marketing surface, this is a useful comparison even though the niche is totally different.
@Thegauravrai1 (9,630 subs, India) is a stock market education channel. 319 videos, roughly 30 subs per video — that's actually the second-best per-video ratio in this set, behind only B.MCartoon. Smaller catalog, more focused output. From GameWardTV's perspective there's no niche overlap, but the cadence pattern is similar: under 500 videos, mid-teens-K subscribers, suggesting a channel that's selective rather than firehose. Worth a glance if you're curious what a small focused channel looks like in a totally different vertical.
@B.MCartoon-k6q (16,700 subs, country unknown) is a cartoon channel — and it's the most efficient channel in the entire set on a subs-per-video basis: ~70. Only 239 uploads for 16,700 subs. That's a different beast entirely. Kids' content scales differently because the audience watches on loop and YouTube's algorithm rewards repeat-viewing signals heavily. Nothing for GameWardTV to learn directly, but as a benchmark for what "high yield per video" looks like in 2026, it's a useful number to keep in mind.
If you watch @GameWardTV, the honest answer is that none of these five are obvious adjacent watches — the comparison set leans more on sub-range proximity than niche fit. Realistic next-watch suggestions for a GameWard fan would be other French esports team channels (Karmine Corp, Vitality, Solary), not these. But if you're a creator doing competitive analysis: @tradethepool is the closest structural cousin (brand-run, not creator-run), @SuperZeplay is the closest content cousin (gaming), and @B.MCartoon-k6q is the channel whose efficiency you'd actually want to dissect.
Common questions
Who are @GameWardTV's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Honestly, @GameWardTV doesn't have direct competitors in this scraped set — the closest size-range channels (@DailyperfectClasses at 26,100, @B.MCartoon-k6q at 16,700, @tradethepool at 14,500) sit in completely different niches. The real competitors would be other French esports team channels like Karmine Corp or Vitality. In this comparison set, @SuperZeplay (11,700 subs, US) is the only one sharing gaming DNA, and @tradethepool shares the brand-channel structure. Treat this set as benchmarks, not rivals.
How does @GameWardTV compare to @SuperZeplay?
Different volume strategies. @SuperZeplay has 826 videos for 11,700 subs — roughly 14 subs earned per video. @GameWardTV has 414 videos for 18,500 subs — about 45 per video. Zeplay grinds short gameplay clips and glitch content; GameWardTV publishes more selectively around team content. Zeplay is US-based, GameWardTV is French. If you're studying how to scale on YouTube via sheer upload volume, Zeplay is the case study. If you're studying how a brand channel concentrates audience without high frequency, GameWardTV is.
What channels should I watch alongside @GameWardTV?
Realistically, none in this exact set. GameWardTV is the YouTube channel of a French esports org, so the natural co-watches are other French and EU esports brands — Karmine Corp, Team Vitality, Solary, Mkers. From the scraped competitor set, @SuperZeplay (11,700 subs) is the only gaming-adjacent option, but it's US-based glitch and tips content rather than team-brand storytelling. If you came for GameWard team content specifically, this competitor list won't fill that gap.
Is @GameWardTV the biggest channel in their niche?
Within this comparison set, no — @DailyperfectClasses leads at 26,100 subs, but it's an Indian tutorial channel, not the same niche at all. Among actually-gaming channels in the set, @GameWardTV (18,500) is the largest, ahead of @SuperZeplay (11,700). In the broader French esports landscape they're a mid-tier team channel — orgs like Karmine Corp dwarf them. Mid-teens-K subs is solid for a team channel that's not a household name, but it's not category-leading.
What's the difference between @GameWardTV and similar creators?
Structural: @GameWardTV is a brand channel for an esports organization, not a personal creator. Of the five compared, only @tradethepool shares that structure. Output: 414 videos across the channel's lifetime suggests measured upload cadence — not the daily grind of @SuperZeplay (826 videos) or @DailyperfectClasses (1,500 videos). Audience model: subscribers tied to the GameWard team's success rather than to a personality. That means upload performance probably correlates with team news cycles more than algorithm trends, which is unusual for a channel this size.
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