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Competitor comparison · @ParikshaSansar

@ParikshaSansar Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared

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@ParikshaSansar (2,130 subs, 281 videos) sits in a similar-channels cluster alongside @abheyparsad2017 (2,450 subs) and @FUFAFullFacts (3,040 subs), all India-based micro channels. The key differentiator is niche: ParikshaSansar runs Hindi SSC and Railway exam prep, while the closest comparables run devotional, facts, and gaming content.

Channel data · captured Jun 19, 2026

Handle
@ParikshaSansar
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

The competitor set YouTube surfaces for @ParikshaSansar is interesting because it's not a clean niche cluster. Usually 'similar channels' pulls from one topic — exam prep with exam prep, gaming with gaming. Here you've got gaming, facts, devotional, and exam prep sitting next to each other. From what I can tell that tells you more about how YouTube's recommendation graph grouped them — probably audience-overlap signals from Hindi-speaking viewers in similar age brackets and growth tier — than any real content topic match. Worth keeping in mind as you read through who actually showed up.

@abheyparsad2017 is the closest competitor by raw size — 2,450 subs to ParikshaSansar's 2,130, only a 320-sub gap. Their channel description is just "#radhikakanha," which signals Krishna devotional content. 360 videos in catalog. ParikshaSansar sits at about 7.6 subs per video; abheyparsad runs closer to 6.8 — very similar production economics, just very different topics. Worth watching if you want to study how a high-frequency Hindi-language micro channel structures and titles its catalog. Not a niche overlap at all though.

@FUFAFullFacts (3,040 subs, 236 videos) is the most interesting comparable in this set. They have FEWER videos than ParikshaSansar (236 versus 281) but about 900 more subscribers. That's roughly 12.9 subs per video versus ParikshaSansar's 7.6 — each FUFA upload is pulling significantly more weight. The content is curiosity-driven facts in Hinglish, competing for similar demographic attention (Indian teens and young adults, language-flexible). If you're studying how to crack Hindi/Hinglish discovery on YouTube, their thumbnails and title patterns are worth a slow look — they've figured out something ParikshaSansar hasn't yet.

@Wrapupislive (3,160 subs, 326 videos) is BGMI gaming in Hindi, second highest sub count in this cluster. Gaming is a completely different vertical from exam prep, but the Hindi-speaking BGMI audience overlaps heavily with the SSC and Railway aspirant audience in age (mostly 16-24) and language register. That's probably why the algorithm pulled them in. If you're @ParikshaSansar, the takeaway isn't to copy their content — it's to notice how they build retention through live streams and community moments, which exam prep channels almost never do well.

@Freyaislive (4,100 subs, 581 videos) is the biggest channel in this cluster and the most puzzling inclusion. English-language gaming streamer, country unclear, 581 videos in catalog — that's roughly double ParikshaSansar's output. Almost certainly a stream-archive model. Why YouTube clustered an English gaming streamer with a Hindi exam prep channel is genuinely unclear; probably a thin signal in the recommendation graph, maybe shared early subscribers or a similar growth curve shape. Worth noting as a competitor on paper but the least useful comparison for actual content strategy.

@MorphineReady (1,320 subs, 2,700 videos, US) is the smallest channel in this list and the only one under 2K subs. But the video count is the headline — 2,700 uploads is nearly ten times ParikshaSansar's catalog. Almost certainly stream archives or clip dumps. The interesting takeaway here: a US-based ARMA Reforger gamer landing in a Hindi exam prep recommendation cluster is a reminder that 'similar channels' surfaces channels with similar growth curves and sub counts more than similar content. Useful as a benchmark for how a sub-2K channel paces itself, not as a niche comparable at all.

If you watch @ParikshaSansar, the honest pick from this set to also watch is @FUFAFullFacts — closest in language register and demographic. The rest are interesting comparables for growth-curve modeling but not for content strategy. The real niche competitors for ParikshaSansar would be the big SSC/Railway prep channels like Adda247 or Study IQ — none of those showed up here, probably because they're several tiers too large to register as 'similar.' That gap is worth thinking about — it means the algorithm sees ParikshaSansar's audience signals before its topic signals, which is normal at this sub count but worth tracking as the channel grows.

Common questions

Who are @ParikshaSansar's biggest competitors on YouTube?

By raw sub count in this similar-channels cluster, @Freyaislive (4,100 subs) is the largest, followed by @Wrapupislive (3,160) and @FUFAFullFacts (3,040). @abheyparsad2017 (2,450) is closest by size to ParikshaSansar's 2,130. But none of these are direct exam-prep competitors — they're channels YouTube grouped by audience overlap signals, not topic. The actual content competitors for @ParikshaSansar are the big SSC/Railway prep brands like Adda247, Study IQ, and RWA, which sit several tiers larger and don't show up in this set at all.

How does @ParikshaSansar compare to @MorphineReady?

@MorphineReady is a US-based ARMA Reforger gamer with 1,320 subs and 2,700 videos. @ParikshaSansar is a Hindi SSC/Railway exam prep channel with 2,130 subs and 281 videos. Almost nothing in common except a similar growth tier. The video-count gap is wild — MorphineReady has nearly 10x the uploads but fewer subs, which suggests heavy stream-archive uploading versus ParikshaSansar's more deliberate per-video model. ParikshaSansar gets about 7.6 subs per video; MorphineReady runs about 0.49. Completely different strategies, completely different audiences.

What channels should I watch alongside @ParikshaSansar?

Honestly, the most useful one in this similar-channels cluster is @FUFAFullFacts (3,040 subs). They run curiosity-driven facts content in Hinglish, which shares ParikshaSansar's audience demographic — Indian teens and young adults, language-flexible. Their subs-per-video ratio (~12.9) is also worth studying since each upload pulls more weight than ParikshaSansar's (~7.6). If you're watching ParikshaSansar for exam prep, look at FUFAFullFacts to see how the same demographic engages with non-academic content. The gaming channels in this set are less relevant for content strategy.

Is @ParikshaSansar the biggest channel in their niche?

No — and not even close in the broader exam prep niche. @ParikshaSansar sits at 2,130 subs with 281 videos. The actual giants in Indian competitive exam prep (Adda247, Study IQ IAS, RWA) are at several million subs each. Within the cluster YouTube returns as 'similar channels,' ParikshaSansar is fourth out of six by sub count, behind @Freyaislive (4,100), @Wrapupislive (3,160), @FUFAFullFacts (3,040), and @abheyparsad2017 (2,450). Bigger than only @MorphineReady (1,320) in this specific set.

What's the difference between @ParikshaSansar and similar creators?

The biggest difference is niche commitment. @ParikshaSansar is locked into SSC/Railway exam prep in Hindi — a high-intent, specific audience. The 'similar' channels span gaming (@MorphineReady, @Freyaislive, @Wrapupislive), facts (@FUFAFullFacts), and devotional (@abheyparsad2017). They're competing for general audience attention; ParikshaSansar is competing for serious aspirants. Upload cadence varies wildly too — from MorphineReady's 2,700 videos to FUFAFullFacts's 236. ParikshaSansar's 281 videos for 2,130 subs is middle-of-the-pack efficiency, but the audience intent is much higher than anyone else in this cluster.

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