@LifeSettt Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Analyzed (May 2026)
@LifeSettt (25,400 subs, 326 videos) competes most directly with @Aspirant.Diaries (18,100 subs) and @Arifrahmanextra (20,200 subs) — both Indian self-improvement channels in roughly the same sub band. The clearest differentiator is language: LifeSettt leans Hinglish/Hindi while the others trend English-first.
Channel data · captured May 13, 2026
- Handle
- @LifeSettt
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
Looking at this channel pool honestly, LifeSettt isn't sitting in a tight competitor cluster — it's a Hindi-leaning motivation/mindset channel, and the scraped set is a mix of study creators, a Nigerian design channel, a Valorant highlights account, and a Hindi tech reviewer. Audience overlap is real for maybe two of these. The rest share surface-level signals (similar sub counts, Indian audience, short-form leaning) but not the actual viewer. Worth saying upfront so the comparisons mean something.
@Aspirant.Diaries (18,100 subs, 282 videos) is probably the closest spiritual cousin. Tabby's whole framing — "cozy corner," aesthetic study motivation, the lowercase channel description with sparkles — targets a Gen Z student audience that wants motivation packaged softly. LifeSettt is doing the same job ("Soch Badlo, Life Set Karo") but in a more direct, Hinglish motivational-quote register. Different vibe, same underlying need. If you're a creator studying LifeSettt's audience, watch Aspirant.Diaries to see how the English-speaking, aesthetic-driven slice of that same audience gets served. Follow her instead of LifeSettt if you don't read Hindi.
@Arifrahmanextra (20,200 subs, 95 videos) is the other genuine adjacency. Arif covers board exam strategy, productivity, time management — the practical self-improvement lane that motivation channels feed into. The interesting tell here is his video count: just 95 videos for 20K subs, versus LifeSettt's 326 videos for 25K. Arif is getting roughly 3x the subs per upload, which usually means longer-form content with stronger retention. LifeSettt looks like a high-volume short-form strategy. Different machines entirely. Worth watching Arif if you want a contrast in upload economics.
@KKtech93 (19,900 subs, 587 videos) shares country and language but almost nothing else. He's reviewing phones and gadgets in Hindi — same audience demographic as LifeSettt in the sense that Hindi-speaking Indian YouTube viewers might watch both, but the content jobs don't overlap. The data point worth flagging is volume: 587 videos for under 20K subs is a brutal subs-per-video ratio. Tech reviews are commodity content; motivation has more emotional stickiness. Following KKtech93 alongside LifeSettt only makes sense if you're studying the broader Hindi creator ecosystem, not the niche specifically.
@GREATWITHAI01 (22,800 subs, 155 videos) is the one I'd push back on hardest as a "similar channel." It's a Nigerian graphic design / AI tools channel. Same sub band, totally different audience, different country, different content category. The algorithm probably surfaced it because of generic English keywords overlapping with the motivation niche's tag soup. Honestly, if you watch LifeSettt, GREATWITHAI01 isn't on your watchlist — and vice versa. I'm including it because it was in the scrape, not because it's a real comp.
@Val.Archives (43,200 subs, 299 videos) is the largest channel in the set but the least related. Valorant gaming highlights, faceless edit-driven content. The only thing it really teaches you about LifeSettt's strategy is what a higher sub count looks like on a similar video count — Val.Archives has 1.7x the subs on roughly the same upload volume, because gaming highlights are sticky and shareable in a way motivational shorts often aren't. Useful as a benchmark for what "good" looks like at 300-ish videos in.
If you watch @LifeSettt, you should also be watching @Aspirant.Diaries for the same emotional territory in English and @Arifrahmanextra for the practical-application side of self-improvement. The other three in this set are interesting data points but not real competitors. A small caveat — I can't see retention curves, CTR, or revenue from outside, so the "who's actually winning" question needs the analytics dashboard to answer. From upload patterns and sub-to-video ratios alone, Arif's lower-volume, higher-conversion approach is the one I'd be studying if I ran LifeSettt.
Common questions
Who are @LifeSettt's biggest competitors on YouTube?
The closest real competitors are @Aspirant.Diaries (18,100 subs) and @Arifrahmanextra (20,200 subs) — both Indian self-improvement creators in the same 18K-25K sub band. Aspirant.Diaries targets the same student-age motivation audience in English with an aesthetic angle. Arif covers the practical productivity side. The other channels that get surfaced as similar — @GREATWITHAI01, @KKtech93, @Val.Archives — share sub counts but don't actually overlap on audience. Worth knowing that algorithmic "similar channels" lists often mix real competitors with sub-band twins.
How does @LifeSettt compare to @GREATWITHAI01?
Honestly, these two shouldn't be compared as competitors. @LifeSettt is a 25,400-sub Hindi motivation channel from India; @GREATWITHAI01 is a 22,800-sub Nigerian graphic design and AI tools channel. The sub counts are similar (within 12% of each other) but the audiences, languages, and content categories don't overlap. If both surfaced on a "similar channels" list it's because of generic English tags and creator-economy keywords, not because viewers actually watch both. Treat this pairing as a data artifact rather than a real competitive matchup.
What channels should I watch alongside @LifeSettt?
For overlapping content, watch @Aspirant.Diaries — same Gen Z student motivation audience, English-first, more aesthetic packaging. For the practical self-improvement side, @Arifrahmanextra is solid; his 20,200 subs on just 95 videos suggests strong per-video performance worth studying. If you're researching the broader Hindi creator landscape (not just motivation specifically), @KKtech93 is the same country and language but covers tech. The remaining channels in the scraped set don't really fit a LifeSettt watchlist. Two real adjacencies and one tangential, basically.
Is @LifeSettt the biggest channel in their niche?
At 25,400 subs, @LifeSettt is mid-pack in this specific set — bigger than @Aspirant.Diaries (18,100) and @Arifrahmanextra (20,200), smaller than @Val.Archives (43,200), though Val.Archives is gaming and not the same niche. Within the Indian motivation/self-improvement lane represented here, LifeSettt is the largest. That said, this is a 5-channel scrape, not the full niche. The actual Hindi motivation space on YouTube has channels in the millions of subs (Sandeep Maheshwari, etc.), so LifeSettt is mid-tier in the global niche but leading in this peer group.
What's the difference between @LifeSettt and similar creators?
Three real differentiators show up in the data. Language: LifeSettt leans Hindi/Hinglish while @Aspirant.Diaries and @Arifrahmanextra publish primarily in English. Upload volume: LifeSettt has 326 videos versus Arif's 95 — very different content strategies, with LifeSettt running a higher-volume approach. Tone: LifeSettt's description reads as direct motivational coaching ("Soch Badlo, Life Set Karo"), Aspirant.Diaries is softer and aesthetic-driven, Arif is practical and exam-focused. Same broad niche, three pretty different executions. The Hindi-first positioning is LifeSettt's clearest moat.
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