@MindlessPixels Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared
@MindlessPixels (32,700 subs, 374 videos) overlaps most closely with @Jodff27 (31,200 subs, Free Fire shorts) and @Bobykgrow (29,700 subs, YouTube-growth tips). The key differentiator is content type — MindlessPixels is the only pure Minecraft-shorts channel in this comparison set, while the others split between gaming, education, and meta-creator content.
Channel data · captured May 14, 2026
- Handle
- @MindlessPixels
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
Honestly, the competitor set here is a little messier than it looks at first glance. MindlessPixels is a Minecraft-shorts channel run by Hitesh out of India, pushing two uploads a day across 374 videos to hit 32,700 subs. The closest neighbors by sub count are all India-based small-to-mid creators, but their content angles are scattered — Free Fire gameplay, growth tips, education, drama, even a US-based business creator. So the overlap isn't really "same niche" — it's more "same approximate audience size, same algorithm tier." That distinction matters for who you'd actually study.
@Jodff27 (31,200 subs, 176 videos) is probably the truest peer here. Free Fire shorts only, India-based, openly targeting 50K — basically the same playbook as MindlessPixels but in a different game. What's interesting is the video count: 176 vs MindlessPixels' 374. Jodff27 is doing roughly half the volume and sitting at a similar sub count, which suggests either better per-video performance or a more recent start. If you're MindlessPixels, this is the channel to actually watch — same format constraints (vertical, sub-60-second gaming clips), same regional audience, just a different IP. Worth studying their thumbnail style and hook patterns.
@Bobykgrow (29,700 subs, 35 videos) is a completely different animal. Only 35 videos to hit nearly 30K subs — that's a per-video efficiency that's wildly different from MindlessPixels' 374-video grind. Bobykgrow makes YouTube-growth tips content in Hindi, which means their audience is *other small creators*. So they're not really a content competitor — they're more like a channel MindlessPixels might actually subscribe to. The reason to watch them isn't to copy the format; it's because they sit downstream of every Indian creator trying to grow, and their video titles probably double as keyword research.
@Toppscholars (29,200 subs, 1,500 videos) is the outlier on volume. 1,500 uploads to get to 29K subs is roughly 19 subs per video, which is brutal — but education channels often grow that way, slowly accruing search traffic. They're India-based and doing student-focused content. The reason this channel shows up adjacent to MindlessPixels isn't audience overlap at all; it's that they're both Indian channels in the 27-32K band, so YouTube's recommendation graph clusters them. Don't actually watch this one for tactical reasons unless you're curious how long-tail SEO plays out for Indian edu creators.
@MilanSinghhh (46,500 subs, 1,200 videos) is the largest channel in the set and the only US-based one. The bio frames them as a self-made entrepreneur who's moved through e-commerce, phone repair, and a bunch of side hustles. Completely different audience from MindlessPixels — older, business-curious, English-first. The only reason they're in this comparison is the sub-count proximity and probably some overlap in the "hustle culture" recommendations algorithm. If you're MindlessPixels, you'd watch Milan to understand how a single-creator personality scales past 40K, but the content lessons don't really transfer to gaming shorts.
@sameer_dramaa (27,500 subs, 1,000 videos) rounds out the set. Daily-deals and viral-products content in Hindi-English mix, 1,000 videos deep, pushing affiliate-style shopping content. Again, this is a volume play — 1,000 videos to get to 27.5K is similar territory to Toppscholars. The interesting overlap with MindlessPixels is the daily-upload mentality (MindlessPixels promises 2 shorts daily, sameer_dramaa is clearly on a similar treadmill). If there's a tactical lesson here, it's that the Indian creator market rewards consistent daily uploads even when individual videos don't hit — both channels are sitting on the same scale-through-volume strategy.
If you watch @MindlessPixels and want similar viewing, @Jodff27 is the closest content match by far — both are short-form Indian gaming creators at the same scale. @Bobykgrow is worth following if you're a creator yourself rather than a viewer. The other three (Toppscholars, MilanSinghhh, sameer_dramaa) are adjacent in algorithm terms but not really in content terms, so I wouldn't call them "channels like MindlessPixels" in any meaningful sense — they just happen to share a sub-count bracket.
Common questions
Who are @MindlessPixels's biggest competitors on YouTube?
The closest direct competitor is @Jodff27 (31,200 subs), another India-based gaming-shorts creator focused on Free Fire instead of Minecraft. Beyond that, the algorithm-adjacent set includes @Bobykgrow (29,700 subs, growth tips), @Toppscholars (29,200 subs, education), and @sameer_dramaa (27,500 subs, shopping content). @MilanSinghhh (46,500 subs) is larger but US-based and business-focused, so they're a competitor in name only. The honest answer is that MindlessPixels' real competition is every other Minecraft-shorts channel in the 20-50K range, most of which aren't in this specific scraped set.
How does @MindlessPixels compare to @Bobykgrow?
These two aren't really competing for the same eyeballs. MindlessPixels has 374 videos to reach 32,700 subs — a high-volume Minecraft-shorts grind. @Bobykgrow has just 35 videos at 29,700 subs, which is wildly more efficient per upload, but the content is YouTube-growth tips in Hindi, aimed at other creators. So Bobykgrow's audience probably includes people like Hitesh himself. If you're scouting competitors, the more useful frame is that Bobykgrow is a creator-resource channel, while MindlessPixels is an entertainment channel for gaming-shorts viewers.
What channels should I watch alongside @MindlessPixels?
If you actually enjoy the Minecraft-shorts format, @Jodff27 is the closest tonal match in this set — Free Fire instead of Minecraft, but same vertical short-form India-gaming vibe. Beyond that, the scraped competitor list doesn't have great content-similarity matches; @Toppscholars and @sameer_dramaa are different genres entirely. To find real "watch alongside" channels, you'd probably want to look at MindlessPixels' actual recommendation sidebar — channels like Maizen, EkulSubs, and other Minecraft-shorts creators in the 30-100K range are the more honest peer set.
Is @MindlessPixels the biggest channel in their niche?
No, not even close. Minecraft-shorts as a category has channels in the millions — Maizen sits at tens of millions of subs, and there are dozens of mid-tier creators in the 100K-1M range. Within the specific scraped competitor set here, @MilanSinghhh (46,500 subs) is the largest, but that's a business creator, not a Minecraft channel. Among the actual gaming creators in the comparison, MindlessPixels (32,700) is slightly ahead of @Jodff27 (31,200), so within this specific small peer group it's mid-pack, but the broader niche is much larger.
What's the difference between @MindlessPixels and similar creators?
The clearest difference is content focus — MindlessPixels is the only channel in this set doing Minecraft shorts specifically. @Jodff27 does Free Fire, @Bobykgrow does growth tips, @Toppscholars does education, @MilanSinghhh does business, @sameer_dramaa does shopping. The upload cadence is also distinct: MindlessPixels promises 2 shorts daily, putting them in the high-volume Indian-creator pattern alongside @Toppscholars (1,500 videos) and @sameer_dramaa (1,000). The 374-video count suggests Hitesh has been pushing this pace consistently, which is a fair amount of throughput for a channel at this scale.
Get the same audit on YOUR channel
Free, no signup. Paste your channel URL — Grow Creator runs the full breakdown.
Try Grow Creator free →