@STUDYxBOI Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels, Honestly Compared
@STUDYxBOI sits at 17,000 subs with 100 videos in the Hindi motivation/discipline space. The closest analogs in this scraped competitor set are @Bobykgrow (29,700 subs, YouTube growth tips, also India) and @MindlessPixels (32,700 subs, India-based gaming shorts) — though honestly, niche overlap is thinner than the country match suggests.
Channel data · captured May 14, 2026
- Handle
- @STUDYxBOI
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
@STUDYxBOI is a Hindi-language motivation channel — the bio literally says 'Jb bhi aap Demotivated feel kre to meri videos visit kr lena.' That's a pretty specific reader: Hindi-speaking, probably student-age, opening the app at a low moment looking for short discipline-themed content. 100 videos against 17,000 subs is a respectable ratio — roughly 170 subs per video on average. The competitor set scraped here is geographically scattered and content-wise diverse, which tells you something on its own: the algorithm probably buckets this channel less by 'study/motivation' and more by short-form upload patterns or audience demographic crossover.
@ggrewind sits at 32,800 subs across 1,500 videos — that's nearly 2x STUDYxBOI's subs but 15x the upload volume. Ukrainian channel doing gaming and video editing, with a bio that emphasizes original content. The math here is interesting: 1,500 videos for 32,800 subs works out to about 22 subs per video, which is actually worse than STUDYxBOI's ratio. If you're STUDYxBOI, the lesson isn't to copy ggrewind — it's the opposite. ggrewind shows what happens when you flood the feed: total subs grow, but per-video efficiency drops. Worth following if you want to watch a high-volume gaming editor's process, but it's not a niche peer.
@cutethingschannel98 has 32,700 subs from just 53 videos — that's ~617 subs per video, the best ratio in this entire set by a wide margin. It's a small business ideas channel, country unknown. Completely different niche from STUDYxBOI, but the per-video performance is worth staring at. They've apparently figured out a thumbnail/title formula that compounds. Honestly, this is the channel I'd reverse-engineer if I were STUDYxBOI — not for the content, but for the upload-to-sub conversion. 53 videos and 32K subs means almost every video does meaningful work. Most channels would trade a lot for that.
@MindlessPixels is the closest country match — India, run by someone named Hitesh, doing Minecraft funny shorts. 32,700 subs from 374 videos works out to ~87 subs per video. Different content angle entirely (gaming entertainment vs. motivation), but the format is probably similar — short-form, repeatable, designed for the shorts shelf. If STUDYxBOI's audience skews young, Indian, mobile, MindlessPixels is fishing in the same pond with different bait. Worth watching how Hitesh structures hooks, since Minecraft shorts and motivation shorts both live or die on the first 1.5 seconds of the clip.
@Bobykgrow at 29,700 subs from 35 videos is the most unusual case here — ~849 subs per video, the highest ratio in this set. It's a Hindi-language YouTube growth tips channel. So actually, this might be the most directly relevant competitor for STUDYxBOI to study, not because they're in the same niche, but because Boby is teaching the exact audience STUDYxBOI is trying to grow inside of (Hindi-speaking new creators). If STUDYxBOI ever pivots even slightly toward 'how I built discipline as a creator,' there's real overlap. Otherwise it's a useful reference for understanding what Hindi YouTube tutorial content looks like when it works.
@famantogaming is the odd one out — 14,100 subs (smaller than STUDYxBOI), 926 videos, US-based, Souls games cinematic editing. Niche audience, high production value, ~15 subs per video, which is brutal but explainable: Souls content is a thin slice of the gaming market. The relevance to STUDYxBOI is basically zero on content, but as a counterpoint to ggrewind it's useful: famantogaming proves that raw upload volume alone doesn't guarantee anything in a tight niche. Probably not a channel STUDYxBOI's audience would cross over to.
If you actually watch @STUDYxBOI, the honest pairing recommendation is @MindlessPixels (same country, same short-form mobile audience, different content) and @Bobykgrow (same language, adjacent creator-intent). The rest of this scraped set are mostly comparison points — useful for understanding what good per-video efficiency looks like, not for finding your next watch.
Common questions
Who are @STUDYxBOI's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Based on this scraped competitor set, the closest matches are @MindlessPixels (32,700 subs, India, gaming shorts) and @Bobykgrow (29,700 subs, India, YouTube growth tips). Both share the Hindi-speaking India audience profile and the short-form format STUDYxBOI works in. The other three — @ggrewind, @cutethingschannel98, and @famantogaming — show up in the same algorithmic bucket but operate in different niches and geographies. Honestly, calling them 'biggest competitors' is a stretch for this set; the niche overlap is thinner than the surface comparison suggests. The actual closest motivation peers probably sit outside this scrape.
How does @STUDYxBOI compare to @ggrewind?
@ggrewind has 32,800 subs to STUDYxBOI's 17,000 — about 1.9x bigger. But ggrewind has uploaded 1,500 videos vs. STUDYxBOI's 100, meaning their per-video sub efficiency is roughly 22 vs. 170. STUDYxBOI is actually converting better per upload by a wide margin. ggrewind is Ukrainian gaming and editing content; STUDYxBOI is Hindi motivation. Different niche, different language, different audience entirely. The only real takeaway from this comparison is that volume isn't free — ggrewind paid for those extra subs with 14x more work, and the per-video returns are much smaller.
What channels should I watch alongside @STUDYxBOI?
If you're watching @STUDYxBOI for the Hindi-language short-form motivation hits, @MindlessPixels (374 videos, also India) is probably the most natural crossover — different content but a similar audience profile. @Bobykgrow makes sense if you're interested in the meta-game of YouTube growth in Hindi (35 videos, 29,700 subs, very high per-video sub conversion). The other three competitors in this set — @ggrewind, @cutethingschannel98, @famantogaming — are interesting as standalone watches but don't really pair with motivation content. Pick based on which adjacent corner of YouTube you actually want next.
Is @STUDYxBOI the biggest channel in their niche?
Not in this competitor set. Four of the five comparison channels are larger — @ggrewind (32,800), @cutethingschannel98 (32,700), @MindlessPixels (32,700), and @Bobykgrow (29,700). Only @famantogaming (14,100) is smaller. That said, STUDYxBOI's 17,000 subs from just 100 videos works out to about 170 subs per upload, which beats three of the five competitors on a per-video basis. Size isn't the same as efficiency. Hindi motivation as a niche is enormous on YouTube, so there are almost certainly much bigger players outside this scraped competitor set.
What's the difference between @STUDYxBOI and similar creators?
The clearest difference is language and niche: @STUDYxBOI is Hindi-language motivation, while most of this set is English-language and either gaming or business-themed. Upload patterns vary wildly too — @cutethingschannel98 pulled 32,700 subs from just 53 videos (huge per-upload returns), while @ggrewind needed 1,500 videos for roughly similar subs. STUDYxBOI sits in the middle: 100 videos, decent efficiency, niche-focused. The single biggest differentiator is audience intent — people open STUDYxBOI when they feel demotivated, which is a much more specific use case than entertainment, tutorials, or business browsing.
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