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Competitor comparison · @Mr.Kanhasabat

@Mr.Kanhasabat Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared

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@Mr.Kanhasabat (3,750 subs, ~1,200 videos) is a daily gaming-shorts channel from India. Its closest size-and-niche neighbors are @ZyfernoFN (3,620 subs, likely Fortnite shorts) and @HeyMythX (3,150 subs, India). The standout difference: Mr.Kanhasabat has shipped ~27x more videos than @ZyfernoFN to land at a similar sub count.

Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026

Handle
@Mr.Kanhasabat
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

Quick caveat before digging in — the "competitor" set surfaced here looks like it was matched on sub-count proximity more than tight niche overlap. Mr.Kanhasabat is a gaming-shorts channel posting daily, and only two of these five neighbors are actually in the same lane. That's worth flagging up front because some comparisons below are more "channels at your size" than "channels chasing your audience."

The cleanest direct comparison is @ZyfernoFN — 3,620 subs, 44 videos, country unspecified, but the "FN" almost certainly means Fortnite. That's gaming, shorts-friendly content. Here's what's striking: @ZyfernoFN sits within ~130 subs of Mr.Kanhasabat while having uploaded ~27x fewer videos. That's a 1,156-video gap. Whatever ZyfernoFN is doing per upload, it's pulling roughly 82 subs per video against Mr.Kanhasabat's ~3 per video. If you're trying to figure out where to spend editing time, this is the channel to study. Not because they're bigger — they're not — but because their per-upload yield is what a daily-poster wants.

Next closest is @HeyMythX (3,150 subs, 76 videos, India). Similar story to ZyfernoFN — much lower upload volume, much higher subs-per-video (~41). The "Myth" in the handle hints at gaming-adjacent content, though the channel description is generic so I can't fully confirm the niche. For an India-based gaming creator, this is probably the most directly relevant peer to follow. Watch what they're doing with thumbnails, hook lengths, and which game clips they're choosing. Their 76 videos suggest a more curated approach — possibly waiting for clean moments instead of posting daily filler just to hit the upload schedule.

@SIYALALSIR (5,430 subs, 787 videos, India) is the biggest channel in the set but it's not really a competitor. Reading the description, this is an English-learning channel for Hindi speakers. The only overlap with Mr.Kanhasabat is they're both Indian creators posting frequently. Why surface it? Probably because YouTube's recommendation graph sometimes co-watches Indian creators across categories — short-form viewers swap between gaming and learning content. Useful as a benchmark for what consistent daily output gets you in the Indian market (787 videos → 5,430 subs is ~7 subs per video), but don't follow it for gaming insight.

@codingoblin (2,380 subs, 128 videos, UK) is even further afield — described as "building real online businesses, the wins, the flops, and the real numbers." That's a build-in-public business channel, completely outside gaming. The only reason to follow them: if Mr.Kanhasabat ever gets curious about treating the channel like a business and tracking metrics openly. Otherwise it's noise in this competitor set. The 128 videos to 2,380 subs ratio (~19 per video) is fine for a niche-down business channel but not a useful benchmark for gaming shorts.

@DramaDrop-agasdg (2,390 subs, 140 videos, US) is the hardest to read because the description is empty ("More about this channel"). The handle suggests reaction or drama-clip content, which is shorts-adjacent but a different audience and a different market. Smaller than Mr.Kanhasabat both in subs and video count, so less useful as a benchmark either way. Skip unless you specifically want to study US-market shorts pacing — and there are better channels for that than one with a clearly placeholder description.

If you watch @Mr.Kanhasabat, the two channels worth actually studying are @ZyfernoFN and @HeyMythX — both in the gaming-shorts lane, both with dramatically better subs-per-upload than Mr.Kanhasabat's ~3-per-video. The lesson from this set isn't "post more" — Mr.Kanhasabat already posts more than anyone here by a wide margin. It's "post different." A 1,200-video catalogue suggests volume isn't the bottleneck; what each upload is doing might be. Looking at peer channels who got similar results with a fraction of the swings is where the leverage actually sits.

Common questions

Who are @Mr.Kanhasabat's biggest competitors on YouTube?

The closest competitors by sub count and niche are @ZyfernoFN (3,620 subs, Fortnite shorts based on the handle) and @HeyMythX (3,150 subs, India, likely gaming). Both sit within ~600 subs of Mr.Kanhasabat but have uploaded fewer than 80 videos each compared to Mr.Kanhasabat's ~1,200. @SIYALALSIR (5,430 subs) is technically bigger but isn't really a competitor — it's an English-learning channel for Hindi speakers, surfaced probably because both are Indian daily-posting channels. The "competitor" framing here is loose; only two of the five are in the same content lane.

How does @Mr.Kanhasabat compare to @SIYALALSIR?

They're not actually competitors. @SIYALALSIR teaches spoken English to Hindi speakers — totally different audience and content category from Mr.Kanhasabat's gaming shorts. The surface-level similarity: both are India-based channels posting at high volume. SIYALALSIR has 5,430 subs from 787 videos (~7 subs per upload), while Mr.Kanhasabat has 3,750 from 1,200 videos (~3 per upload). If anything, the comparison shows that posting daily in any niche caps out at roughly similar conversion rates — volume alone doesn't sort the gaming vs education question.

What channels should I watch alongside @Mr.Kanhasabat?

For gaming shorts in a similar size range, watch @ZyfernoFN and @HeyMythX. ZyfernoFN sits at 3,620 subs with only 44 videos — likely Fortnite content with strong per-video pull (~82 subs/video). HeyMythX is at 3,150 subs from 76 videos, also probably gaming, also India-based which makes the audience overlap tighter. These two are doing roughly 14-27x better per upload than Mr.Kanhasabat. The other three channels in this set (@SIYALALSIR, @codingoblin, @DramaDrop-agasdg) are in different niches entirely and won't give you actionable gaming-content takeaways.

Is @Mr.Kanhasabat the biggest channel in their niche?

No, but the visible "competitor" set doesn't include the actual top of the niche. Within the channels surfaced here, @SIYALALSIR is the largest at 5,430 subs but it's a different category (English education). Among gaming-adjacent channels in this set, Mr.Kanhasabat at 3,750 subs is actually the largest, edging @ZyfernoFN (3,620) and @HeyMythX (3,150). So in this small group Mr.Kanhasabat leads the gaming peers by subs. Real top-of-niche channels for Indian gaming shorts sit in the hundreds-of-thousands range and weren't surfaced in this set.

What's the difference between @Mr.Kanhasabat and similar creators?

The single biggest observable difference is upload volume versus return. Mr.Kanhasabat has shipped ~1,200 videos for 3,750 subs (~3 subs per video). The closest size peers — @ZyfernoFN (44 videos, 3,620 subs, ~82 per video) and @HeyMythX (76 videos, 3,150 subs, ~41 per video) — have reached similar audiences from a small fraction of the output. The differentiator isn't consistency; Mr.Kanhasabat clearly has that locked. It's per-upload yield. Studying what those two channels do per video, not how often, is probably where the gap closes.

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