@Indgamer_official Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared
@Indgamer_official (25,400 subs, 479 videos) competes most directly with fellow Indian gaming creator @ABSTARYAAR (19,000 subs) and Fortnite-focused @SonarFNOnYT (38,900 subs). The clearest differentiator is geography and format — Indgamer_official posts heavily from India, while @SonarFNOnYT runs a stream-heavy schedule out of the US.
Channel data · captured May 13, 2026
- Handle
- @Indgamer_official
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
Honestly, the competitor set the scraper pulled for @Indgamer_official is a mixed bag, and that's worth saying upfront. Two of the five are gaming creators in roughly the same orbit — @ABSTARYAAR and @SonarFNOnYT — while the other three (Kraig Pruett, Ben Lovegrove, Siavash Abbasalipour) sit in totally different niches: creator education, aviation careers, and clinic automation. The overlap isn't subject matter; it's the sub-count band (roughly 19K to 50K) and the long-form cadence most channels in this range run. So when you read this comparison, the takeaway isn't 'these are five rivals fighting for the same viewer' — it's more like 'here's how a 25K-sub gaming channel from India compares to peers at similar scale across very different verticals.'
@ABSTARYAAR (19,000 subs, 237 videos, India) is the cleanest competitor match — same country, gaming-adjacent, similar sub band. Their description is specifically about gaming stick reviews, unboxings, and deals, which is a much narrower vertical than @Indgamer_official's 479-video catalog suggests. Where Indgamer_official looks like a generalist Indian gaming channel, ABSTARYAAR is going deep on hardware. They've published roughly half the videos for 75% of the subscribers, so on a per-video basis their conversion is meaningfully better. If you watch Indgamer_official for gameplay and don't care about gear, ABSTARYAAR probably won't replace them — but if you're hunting reviews before buying a controller or trigger, that's the channel.
@SonarFNOnYT (38,900 subs, 1,200 videos, US) is the other gaming channel in the set, but the format is completely different. 1,200 videos is heavy — roughly 2.5x Indgamer_official's catalog — and the description (Fortnite, zero-build, daily streaming, donation records) reads like a Twitch creator who reuploads clips and VODs to YouTube. That's a fundamentally different workflow than what 479 videos over a few years suggests for Indgamer_official. You'd watch SonarFN for live-stream personality and Fortnite-specific content; you'd watch Indgamer_official for whatever the Indian gaming scene is producing in 2026. The audiences probably overlap less than the surface-level 'gaming' tag implies.
@kraigpruett (30,500 subs, 265 videos, US) isn't a gaming channel at all — it's creator education through Think Media. The reason it showed up in this set is probably because Indgamer_official's audience includes other small creators looking for growth advice, which is a really common overlap in the 10K-50K subscriber band. Kraig's catalog is much tighter (265 videos for 30K subs is a healthy ratio), and the content is about YouTube strategy, gear, and monetization rather than gameplay. Worth following if you're a creator yourself; not relevant if you're just here for the games.
@BenLovegrove (26,600 subs, 750 videos, UK) is even further from Indgamer_official's niche — aviation careers, aimed at pilots, engineers, and flight attendants. 750 videos for 26K subs is a long grind, and it tells you Ben's been at this for years. Why does it show up as a competitor? My guess: similar sub band, similar pace of consistent uploads, and the algorithm sometimes clusters small-to-mid creators by behavior rather than topic. There's basically no audience overlap here, but it's a useful data point for benchmarking — Ben's channel has been alive long enough to suggest what sustained mid-tier output looks like over time.
@SiavashAbbasalipour (49,600 subs, 387 videos, Australia) is the largest channel in the comparison and the one with the least topic overlap — they're running ClinicSync Pro, automating appointment booking and KPI reporting for healthcare agencies using HighLevel. Almost certainly a B2B audience. The relevant signal isn't audience match; it's that they've reached nearly 50K subs with fewer videos than Indgamer_official has already published. That's a per-video conversion gap worth thinking about — niche specificity often beats volume in this range.
If you watch @Indgamer_official, the two channels actually worth queueing up alongside it are @ABSTARYAAR (for the hardware angle on Indian gaming) and @SonarFNOnYT (if Fortnite is in your rotation). The other three are interesting as case studies in how channels at similar scale operate across totally different verticals — useful for benchmarking, less useful as recommended watches. Worth saying: I can't see retention, average view duration, or upload frequency from the outside, so this comparison is based on what's publicly visible. The actual competitive picture inside YouTube's recommendation graph could look very different.
Common questions
Who are @Indgamer_official's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Based on the scraped competitor set, the closest matches are @ABSTARYAAR (19,000 subs, also from India, focused on gaming hardware reviews) and @SonarFNOnYT (38,900 subs, US, Fortnite-focused streaming). Those two share genuine subject-matter overlap with @Indgamer_official. The other three channels in the set — @kraigpruett, @BenLovegrove, and @SiavashAbbasalipour — sit in totally different niches (creator education, aviation, healthcare automation) and likely surfaced because they live in the same 19K-50K subscriber band rather than because they share audiences. The real gaming competitors are the first two.
How does @Indgamer_official compare to @kraigpruett?
Different niches entirely. @Indgamer_official (25,400 subs, 479 videos) is an Indian gaming channel; @kraigpruett (30,500 subs, 265 videos) is creator education through Think Media — YouTube strategy, gear, monetization. Kraig has fewer videos but more subs, suggesting tighter conversion per upload (roughly 115 subs per video versus Indgamer's 53). If you're watching Indgamer for gameplay, Kraig isn't a replacement. If you're an aspiring creator watching Indgamer because you also want to start a gaming channel, Kraig's content on YouTube growth is probably more directly useful than anything Indgamer is likely covering.
What channels should I watch alongside @Indgamer_official?
Honestly, only two from this set genuinely make sense as companion watches: @ABSTARYAAR if you care about gaming controllers, sticks, and hardware reviews from an Indian creator angle, and @SonarFNOnYT if Fortnite is part of your rotation. The other three (@kraigpruett, @BenLovegrove, @SiavashAbbasalipour) might be interesting if you're a creator studying how mid-tier channels operate across different verticals, but they won't scratch the same itch as Indgamer_official's content. Watch the gaming ones for content overlap; watch the others for benchmarking how niche-focused channels convert subscribers at this scale.
Is @Indgamer_official the biggest channel in their niche?
No — at 25,400 subscribers, @Indgamer_official is mid-pack within this competitor set. @SiavashAbbasalipour leads with 49,600 subs (though in a totally different niche), followed by @SonarFNOnYT at 38,900 and @kraigpruett at 30,500. Indgamer_official sits between @BenLovegrove (26,600) and @ABSTARYAAR (19,000). Within Indian gaming specifically, Indgamer_official is larger than @ABSTARYAAR, but I can't see the full landscape from this five-channel sample. There are almost certainly bigger Indian gaming creators not represented in this scraped set.
What's the difference between @Indgamer_official and similar creators?
The biggest differentiator is video volume relative to subscriber count. @Indgamer_official has 479 videos for 25,400 subs — roughly 53 subs per video. Compare that to @kraigpruett (115 subs per video) or @SiavashAbbasalipour (128 subs per video) and you can see Indgamer is publishing more but converting less per upload. That's a pattern common to gaming generalists. Niche-focused channels like @ABSTARYAAR (gaming sticks specifically) or @SiavashAbbasalipour (healthcare automation specifically) tend to convert better per video because their audience is there for one topic.
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