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Competitor comparison · @Sachhin.5

@Sachhin.5 Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Analyzed (2026)

@Sachhin.5 (10,400 subs, 77 videos) sits in a weird overlap zone — closest direct competitor by size and country is @VishnuSuthar09 (9,110 subs, India). The bigger differentiator across the whole comp set isn't subs, it's video count. Sachhin.5 has 77 videos to make 10.4K. That's efficient.

Channel data · captured May 17, 2026

Handle
@Sachhin.5
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

Before getting into the head-to-head stuff, one thing worth flagging — the "competitor set" the scraper pulled here is genuinely mixed. You've got two Indian self-improvement / student-adjacent channels, two south Asian gaming channels, and Surfshark, which is a VPN company. That tells you the algorithm isn't reading Sachhin.5 as cleanly self-help yet. The audience signal is still forming. For a channel at 10K with only 77 uploads, that's actually normal — the niche locks in later.

@VishnuSuthar09 (9,110 subs, 65 videos, India) is the closest analog in the set. Same country, similar sub band, comparable video count. The difference is positioning — Vishnu's bio frames him as a working graphic designer who's guiding students, so his content has a clear skill-vertical anchor (design, freelancing for students). Sachhin.5's bio is broader: "practical mindset shifts," "day 1 of a better life." Vishnu sells a skill outcome; Sachhin.5 sells a mindset shift. If you're a viewer who already knows you want to learn design, you go to Vishnu. If you're earlier in the funnel — still figuring out what to even work on — Sachhin.5's framing catches you. They're not really fighting for the same click, even though the dashboard groups them.

@Studywithmuksa (7,790 subs, 173 videos, India) is the other Indian channel in the set and probably the most interesting comparison. Muksa has more than double Sachhin.5's video output (173 vs 77) but fewer subs. That's a tell — Muksa is grinding volume in the competitive exam space (BSTC, REET, PTET, LDC mentioned in the bio), which is a saturated category where each video pulls smaller numbers but the audience is highly intent. Sachhin.5 is getting more subs per video, which usually means either better thumbnails or a less saturated topical lane. Worth following Muksa if you're prepping for Indian state exams; Sachhin.5 is more general motivation.

@GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 (14,300 subs, 1,100 videos, Bangladesh) — this one's a stretch as a "competitor" but it's instructive. CJ has ~14x Sachhin.5's video count and only ~1.4x the subs. That's the gaming-channel grind: huge upload volume, modest sub conversion. The reason it shows up in the same set is probably geographic + demographic overlap (young south Asian male viewer), not content. A creator looking at Sachhin.5 for inspiration should not look at CJ's upload cadence as a target. Different game entirely.

@FaishrCraft (13,700 subs, 999 videos, Pakistan) is the same pattern — Minecraft content, near-thousand-video catalog, mid-teens sub count. The honest read here is that gaming channels are showing up in Sachhin.5's competitor pool because YouTube hasn't fully sorted his audience yet. I'd watch this list shift over the next 6 months if he keeps the mindset-content lane tight. Right now FaishrCraft tells you more about audience demographic than content overlap.

@Surfshark (20,800 subs, 456 videos, Netherlands) is the outlier. A VPN brand's official channel ending up in a comp set with an Indian self-improvement creator means the only thread connecting them is probably ad-targeting demographics or a shared viewer who watches tech-adjacent content. Useful as a benchmark for what a polished, well-produced corporate channel looks like at the 20K mark, but not a creator competitor in any meaningful sense. Skip it as a comparison; treat it as noise.

If you watch @Sachhin.5, the genuinely adjacent watch is @VishnuSuthar09 — same country, same sub tier, complementary angle (skill execution vs mindset framing). @Studywithmuksa works if you want the academic-prep version of similar audience energy. The gaming channels and Surfshark are in the data but not in the actual niche; treat them as algorithmic noise rather than real competitive signal. The most useful thing Sachhin.5 could do with this set is study what Vishnu's thumbnails look like — same country, same sub range, that's where the apples-to-apples comparison actually lives.

Common questions

Who are @Sachhin.5's biggest competitors on YouTube?

Closest direct competitor by country and sub tier is @VishnuSuthar09 (9,110 subs, India), who runs a student-focused design education channel. @Studywithmuksa (7,790 subs, India) is the other Indian channel in the same orbit, focused on competitive exam prep. The scraped set also includes @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 (14,300 subs, Bangladesh), @FaishrCraft (13,700 subs, Pakistan), and @Surfshark (20,800 subs, VPN brand), but those last three are demographic-overlap noise rather than real content competitors. The two Indian channels are the only meaningful peer set.

How does @Sachhin.5 compare to @VishnuSuthar09?

They're remarkably close on the surface — Sachhin.5 has 10,400 subs across 77 videos, Vishnu has 9,110 subs across 65 videos. Both Indian, both in the same growth band. The real difference is positioning. Vishnu sells a tangible skill outcome (graphic design, freelancing) to students. Sachhin.5 sells a mindset shift, framed as "day 1 of a better life." Vishnu's funnel is narrower and lower in it; Sachhin.5 catches viewers earlier when they're still figuring out direction. Different stages of the same potential viewer.

What channels should I watch alongside @Sachhin.5?

Honestly, @VishnuSuthar09 is the obvious pairing — same demographic, complementary content angle, similar production scale. If you're in the Indian student/early-career audience that Sachhin.5 seems to target, Vishnu fills in the practical-skill side. @Studywithmuksa is worth a look if you're specifically prepping for Indian state competitive exams. Skip the gaming channels in the algorithmic set — they share demographic overlap but no content alignment. The Surfshark channel is also in the data but it's a VPN brand, not a creator, so it's not really comparable as a watch.

Is @Sachhin.5 the biggest channel in their niche?

Not the biggest in the full pulled set — Surfshark is at 20,800 subs and the two gaming channels both clear 13K. But among actual creator-to-creator comparisons in the self-improvement / student-mindset Indian lane, Sachhin.5 at 10,400 subs is slightly ahead of @VishnuSuthar09 (9,110) and @Studywithmuksa (7,790). Also worth noting — Sachhin.5 has done it in only 77 videos. That's a better subs-per-video ratio than anyone else in the set, which usually points to stronger thumbnail or topic-selection performance per upload.

What's the difference between @Sachhin.5 and similar creators?

The clearest gap is upload volume to subscriber efficiency. Sachhin.5 has 77 videos for 10,400 subs — roughly 135 subs per video. Compare that to @Studywithmuksa (45 subs per video), @FaishrCraft (~14 subs per video), or @GAMINGWITHCJ-1212 (~13 subs per video). Sachhin.5 is converting individual videos into subscribers at a much higher rate. The other difference is positioning — most of the comp set sells a specific skill or game vertical. Sachhin.5's bio is mindset-focused, which is broader audience but harder to defend long-term.

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