@SammyyShots_03 Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared
@SammyyShots_03 (4,250 subs, 25 videos) sits in a small India-based cricket shorts pocket. Its closest peers by size are @vedanshi_chandanii (5,150 subs, 39 videos) and @TheWienerGuy (4,970 subs, 264 videos). The key gap: SammyyShots has roughly 10x fewer uploads than the most active channels in this competitor set.
Channel data · captured May 21, 2026
- Handle
- @SammyyShots_03
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
The competitor set here is honestly a bit of a grab bag, which tells you something on its own. When you've got 4,250 subs and 25 uploads built around #cricket and #viratkholi hashtags, YouTube's similarity graph is mostly matching on size and shorts-format rather than topic. So the channels showing up next to SammyyShots aren't all cricket — they're a mix of small Indian shorts creators, a Nigerian web-dev channel, and a guy who really likes hotdogs. That's worth naming up front because it shapes what 'competition' actually means here. SammyyShots isn't really fighting for the same viewer as @Codemyhobby. They're fighting for the same recommendation slot.
@vedanshi_chandanii (5,150 subs, 39 videos) is probably the most legitimate head-to-head competitor on this list. The sub count is in the same ballpark, the video count is in the same ballpark (39 vs SammyyShots' 25), and the channel description is similarly thin — just 'More about this channel,' which usually means it's a personal/shorts account that grew off one or two pieces of content. Without seeing the actual videos it's hard to call the niche, but the structural profile is almost identical: small library, recent growth curve, no heavy branding. If you're SammyyShots, this is the channel to study — same stage, slightly ahead. Watch what their last 5 uploads did differently.
@TheWienerGuy (4,970 subs, 264 videos) is a completely different beast and worth flagging as a contrast more than a competitor. 264 videos to hit ~5K subs is roughly 19 subs per video, which is the grind path — high volume, low per-video pull. The 'I like Hotdogs 🌭' description is the whole identity. SammyyShots is averaging closer to 170 subs per upload, which is a much better ratio. So actually if you're SammyyShots reading this, the takeaway isn't 'do what TheWienerGuy does.' It's the opposite. Your per-video efficiency is higher; the question is whether you can scale frequency without that number collapsing.
@Codemyhobby (4,540 subs, 273 videos, Nigeria) is here for size-bucket reasons, not topic. They're teaching web design and JavaScript. The only real reason to pay attention to this channel as a SammyyShots viewer or competitor: it's a useful reminder that the 4K-5K sub band is where YouTube starts mixing your suggested videos with channels outside your language and topic. That's a discovery problem to be aware of. When your shorts get pushed next to Nigerian dev tutorials, your retention at the start of the video matters more — the algo is testing harder.
@onlyoyelmax (3,340 subs, 138 videos) feels closest in spirit. The description is that vertical 'PLEASE SUBSCRIBE TO MY CHANNEL' formatting that screams new-to-platform, audience-asking energy. 138 videos to land at 3,340 subs means the per-upload pull is weak — around 24 subs per video. Compared to SammyyShots' rough 170, that's a meaningful gap. If you watch SammyyShots and you're researching the niche, onlyoyelmax is the cautionary tale: lots of output, weak per-video signal, no clear positioning. Worth following if you want to see what NOT to copy.
@youthgamingnihar6942 (2,500 subs, 556 videos, India) is the most extreme version of the high-volume play in this set. 556 videos. That's roughly 4.5 subs per video, which is brutal. The channel is Minecraft logic shorts in Hindi/Hinglish — totally different topic from cricket, but same audience geography (India) and same shorts format. The reason this matters: India-based shorts creators are competing against this exact volume strategy constantly. SammyyShots' 25-video, 4,250-sub profile is more efficient by orders of magnitude, but it's also more fragile. One viral video probably carries most of that sub count. Worth checking which one.
If you watch @SammyyShots_03, the channels actually worth queueing alongside it are @vedanshi_chandanii (same stage, same trajectory) and maybe @youthgamingnihar6942 if you want to see the high-volume India shorts contrast. The other three are size-similar but topic-disconnected. For SammyyShots themselves, the read is: per-video efficiency is the real asset here, not catalog size. Don't get tricked into chasing 200+ uploads just because that's what the neighbors are doing.
Common questions
Who are @SammyyShots_03's biggest competitors on YouTube?
By raw sub count, the closest peers are @vedanshi_chandanii (5,150 subs) and @TheWienerGuy (4,970 subs). But 'competitor' is loose here — SammyyShots has 4,250 subs across just 25 videos, and YouTube is pairing them mostly with other small shorts channels regardless of topic. The most genuinely comparable channel is @vedanshi_chandanii, which has a similar small-catalog profile (39 videos) and is sitting just above SammyyShots in subs. The others on the list span web-dev tutorials, hotdog content, and Minecraft shorts — same size bucket, very different audiences.
How does @SammyyShots_03 compare to @vedanshi_chandanii?
Structurally they're almost twins. SammyyShots has 4,250 subs across 25 videos. @vedanshi_chandanii has 5,150 subs across 39 videos. Both have thin channel descriptions and small libraries, which usually means recent growth driven by a few specific uploads rather than a deep catalog play. Vedanshi is slightly ahead on subs and has roughly 14 more videos in the library. The per-video efficiency is comparable — both are pulling well over 100 subs per upload, which is healthy for this size tier. If you're tracking SammyyShots' growth, this is the single channel worth benchmarking against directly.
What channels should I watch alongside @SammyyShots_03?
Honestly, only two of the five really make sense as parallel viewing. @vedanshi_chandanii is the closest match by size and library profile, and @youthgamingnihar6942 is worth a look if you want to see what the India-based high-volume shorts grind looks like (556 videos, 2,500 subs). The other three — @Codemyhobby, @TheWienerGuy, @onlyoyelmax — are surfaced by YouTube because of size similarity, not topic overlap. If you came to SammyyShots for cricket shorts, those three won't scratch the same itch. They're more useful as algorithmic context than as recommendations.
Is @SammyyShots_03 the biggest channel in their niche?
No — within this specific competitor pull, two channels are larger: @vedanshi_chandanii (5,150) and @TheWienerGuy (4,970). But size isn't the most useful metric here. SammyyShots is pulling roughly 170 subs per video across 25 uploads, which is significantly higher per-video efficiency than @TheWienerGuy (~19 subs/video across 264 uploads) or @youthgamingnihar6942 (~4.5 subs/video across 556 uploads). So they're not the biggest by raw count, but they're punching above their library size, which usually means at least one video did real numbers.
What's the difference between @SammyyShots_03 and similar creators?
The clearest difference is upload volume versus sub efficiency. SammyyShots has 25 videos and 4,250 subs. The comparable creators in this set fall into two camps: small-library channels like @vedanshi_chandanii (39 videos) that look structurally similar, and high-volume channels like @TheWienerGuy (264 videos), @Codemyhobby (273), and @youthgamingnihar6942 (556) that have grown via grind. SammyyShots' profile suggests a viral-driven growth path rather than a catalog-driven one — fewer videos doing more work each. Worth checking which specific upload anchored the sub count, because that's likely the channel's actual identity.
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