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Competitor comparison · @LearnWithInterview-Hindi

@LearnWithInterview-Hindi Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared

@LearnWithInterview-Hindi (9,720 subs, 118 videos) competes most directly with @STUDYxBOI (17,000 subs, India-based Hindi motivation) in the UPSC-aspirant space. The five scraped competitors span motivation, hustle, and gaming, but the key differentiator is language and aspirant focus — only one is a true niche match.

Channel data · captured May 14, 2026

Handle
@LearnWithInterview-Hindi
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

Before getting into individual comparisons, one honest note: the competitor set scraped here is mixed. @LearnWithInterview-Hindi is a Hindi-language UPSC motivation channel — topper strategies, motivational speeches, that kind of thing. Two of the five "similar" channels above are actually gaming creators, and one is a make-money-online educator. From what I can tell, YouTube's relatedness signal is leaning on "small channel, education-adjacent, similar upload patterns" rather than topic overlap. So the real head-to-head fight is with maybe one channel on this list. The rest are useful as contrast — they show what the algorithm thinks is adjacent, which is its own data point.

@STUDYxBOI (17,000 subs, 100 videos, India) is the closest real competitor. The bio is in Hinglish — "Jb bhi aap Demotivated feel kre to meri videos visit kr lena" — and the framing is identical to @LearnWithInterview-Hindi: keep aspirants motivated and disciplined. The interesting gap is video count: STUDYxBOI hit 17K with 100 videos, while LearnWithInterview-Hindi sits at 9,720 with 118. So STUDYxBOI is getting roughly 1.75x the subs on fewer uploads. That suggests either better thumbnail/title work, stronger hooks, or just more shareable individual clips. If you're running @LearnWithInterview-Hindi, this is the channel to study — same audience, better per-video pull. Follow them if you want a direct benchmark for what's working in Hindi motivation right now.

@ethanshustle (16,400 subs, 500 videos) is a different beast entirely. He's in the make-money-online / clipping / editing tutorial space, and the bio openly leads with revenue claims. The reason this shows up as a competitor is probably the "education" tag plus a similar small-channel velocity. But the audience is English-speaking, hustle-focused, mostly Western. Watch this one if you're a creator thinking about pivoting toward monetization-as-content, or if you want to see how a 500-video library compounds — that's roughly 4x the uploads of @LearnWithInterview-Hindi with not even 2x the subs, which is its own lesson about volume vs. fit.

@GreatsageGamer (5,480 subs, 84 videos) is a Black Myth: Wukong gameplay channel. There's basically no audience overlap with a UPSC motivation channel — different language framing, different intent, different platform behavior (gaming viewers are session-binge, motivation viewers are clip-and-share). Worth noting only because it's smaller than @LearnWithInterview-Hindi, so the algorithm is clearly clustering on channel-size cohort more than topic here. Skip unless you specifically want gaming context.

@markryt331 (4,970 subs, 123 videos, Egypt) runs a BloodStrike gaming channel. Almost identical video count to @LearnWithInterview-Hindi (123 vs 118) and roughly half the subs. The bio is mostly a subscriber milestone tracker — that's a small but real tactic, treating the bio as a public goal board. Could be coincidence, but @LearnWithInterview-Hindi at 9,720 is one big video away from a 10K celebration, and a similar bio update is the kind of thing that gives existing subs a reason to share. Not a content competitor, but a useful tactical observation.

@famantogaming (14,100 subs, 926 videos, US) is the volume outlier. 926 videos to get to 14.1K — that's ~15 subs per upload, which is brutal economics. The channel does Elden Ring and Souls-like cinematic edits, so completely different audience. The takeaway for @LearnWithInterview-Hindi isn't content, it's the inverse lesson: more uploads doesn't beat better fit. @LearnWithInterview-Hindi is at ~82 subs per video, which is roughly 5x famantogaming's rate despite being a smaller channel overall. That ratio is the real story buried in this comparison set.

If you watch @LearnWithInterview-Hindi, you should also watch @STUDYxBOI — that's the genuine sibling channel. The rest of this list is more useful as a mirror: it shows what YouTube thinks small Hindi motivation looks like to its recommendation system, which is honestly a bit confused. For a creator scout, the real adjacent space is probably UPSC strategy channels, topper interview channels, and Hindi self-discipline creators — not what got scraped here.

Common questions

Who are @LearnWithInterview-Hindi's biggest competitors on YouTube?

The closest real competitor is @STUDYxBOI (17,000 subs, India-based, Hindi motivation for aspirants). After that the overlap drops off fast — the other scraped "similar" channels (@ethanshustle, @GreatsageGamer, @markryt331, @famantogaming) are in hustle and gaming niches, which doesn't really match a UPSC motivation channel. So in honest terms: one true competitor in the scraped set, and the broader competitive space is other Hindi UPSC and topper-strategy channels that didn't show up here. Worth doing a manual search on "UPSC motivation Hindi" to find the actual peer group.

How does @LearnWithInterview-Hindi compare to @ethanshustle?

They barely compare — different language, different audience, different topic. @ethanshustle (16,400 subs, 500 videos) is an English-speaking make-money-online creator focused on clipping and editing tutorials. @LearnWithInterview-Hindi (9,720 subs, 118 videos) is Hindi UPSC motivation. The only useful comparison is upload economics: ethanshustle needed ~500 videos to hit 16.4K, while @LearnWithInterview-Hindi is at 9.7K on 118 — roughly 4x better subs-per-video efficiency. Volume isn't the missing ingredient here; reach within the existing niche probably is.

What channels should I watch alongside @LearnWithInterview-Hindi?

@STUDYxBOI is the main one — same Hinglish motivation framing, same target audience of aspirants who need a discipline push. Beyond the scraped list, look for Hindi UPSC channels that interview toppers, IAS strategy creators, and self-discipline channels in the same language. The scraped competitor set leans heavily on gaming and hustle content, which the algorithm clustered by channel-size rather than topic. If you're scouting for actual content alignment, ignore @GreatsageGamer, @markryt331, and @famantogaming — they're not in this lane at all.

Is @LearnWithInterview-Hindi the biggest channel in their niche?

No — within just this five-channel set, @STUDYxBOI (17,000 subs) is roughly 1.75x larger and operating in the same Hindi motivation/aspirant space. @LearnWithInterview-Hindi sits at 9,720 subs with 118 videos uploaded. The broader Hindi UPSC motivation niche on YouTube has channels well into six and seven figures, so this is a mid-small creator in a crowded category. The opportunity isn't being biggest; it's finding the specific topper-strategy angle the larger channels under-serve, then making that the channel's identity.

What's the difference between @LearnWithInterview-Hindi and similar creators?

The main observable difference is focus tightness. @LearnWithInterview-Hindi positions itself specifically around UPSC aspirants and topper strategies — that's a narrow, intent-driven audience. @STUDYxBOI is broader Hindi motivation without the UPSC anchor. The hustle and gaming channels in the scraped set aren't really comparable. From outside I can't see retention or CTR, but the upload pattern (118 videos to 9.7K subs) suggests the audience is finding it and sticking, just slowly. The differentiator to lean on is probably the exam-aspirant specificity, not generic motivation.

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