@Sandhya-cg1nq Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared
@Sandhya-cg1nq (11,500 subs, 3,100 videos) sits in a loose competitor set alongside @Arifrahmanextra (20,200 subs), @Aspirant.Diaries (18,100), and @KKtech93 (19,900). The key differentiator: Sandhya's video-to-sub ratio is roughly 3.7, a Shorts-heavy fingerprint where competitors lean fewer, sharper-positioned uploads.
Channel data · captured May 13, 2026
- Handle
- @Sandhya-cg1nq
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
Honest read first: Sandhya's bio is just "please support this channel as much as possible" in Hindi, which doesn't tell us much about what's actually being posted. The 3,100 videos against 11.5K subs is the real signal — that's a Shorts-heavy output pattern, almost certainly. So the "competitor set" below isn't a tight niche cluster like food vlogs or one specific corner of EdTech. It's a loose band of small-to-mid Indian creators (plus one Nigerian outlier) that probably surfaces alongside Sandhya through browse feeds and audience overlap, not content overlap. Treat the comparisons that follow with that caveat.
@GREATWITHAI01 is the odd one out. 22,800 subs from Nigeria across only 155 videos — that's roughly 147 subs per video, basically the inverse of Sandhya's pattern. They're doing AI graphic design tutorials aimed at small business owners and content creators, mostly long-form. If Sandhya's audience is mostly Hindi-speaking viewers landing on Shorts, the overlap with this channel is algorithmic (AI curiosity surfacing in recommended) rather than community-driven. Worth following if you're personally interested in AI design tools, but as a peer creator for Sandhya, the comparison breaks down quickly. Different format, different language market, different content economics.
@Arifrahmanextra is much closer to the kind of channel that probably shares actual browse traffic with Sandhya. 20,200 subs, only 95 videos total — board exam strategy, time management, study tips for Indian students. The subs-per-video ratio works out to about 213, which is genuinely strong for a small Indian channel. If any slice of Sandhya's audience leans student/exam-prep (a guess based on the demographic patterns of channels that tend to cluster near hers), Arif is exactly the creator pulling those viewers with much higher per-video efficiency. Follow him to see what tighter packaging and a clearer topic ladder look like in practice.
@Aspirant.Diaries (Tabby) is the aesthetic-study-vlog corner of this set. 18,100 subs across 282 videos, around 64 subs per video. The bio is openly cozy/lifestyle — "hey besties," study sessions, mindful aesthetic, an explicit channel founding date. That's a deliberately marketed identity, which Sandhya's channel doesn't appear to have. For viewers: if you watch Sandhya as general Indian creator content and you skew younger, Tabby is the obvious next watch. For Sandhya as a creator: this is a useful case study in how a clear personality wrapper can make broadly similar content (study + lifestyle) feel completely distinct from everyone else.
@KKtech93 sits in Hindi tech reviews — gadget unboxings, mobile reviews, the standard format. 19,900 subs across 587 videos, working out to roughly 34 subs per video. That ratio is closer to Sandhya's than any other channel in this set, which suggests both creators are running on volume rather than per-video pull. The meaningful difference is niche clarity: KKtech93's bio tells you exactly what you're getting, sponsorship email included. If Sandhya wants a model for how a high-volume Indian channel can still feel coherent, KK is the one to study. The format is repeatable, the topic ladder is obvious, and the audience knows what they're showing up for.
@LearnWithInterview-Hindi is the only channel smaller than Sandhya here — 9,720 subs across 118 videos, focused on UPSC motivation and topper strategies. Country wasn't captured in the scrape. The 82 subs-per-video ratio is decent for a channel of that size, and the niche is sharply defined (UPSC aspirants), which is again a contrast to Sandhya's unclear positioning. If Sandhya's actual audience leans toward Indian government exam prep, this channel is essentially a smaller, more focused version of where her channel could plausibly go if it picked a lane.
If you watch @Sandhya-cg1nq, the most natural next watches are probably @Arifrahmanextra and @Aspirant.Diaries — both Indian, both younger-skewing, both more sharply positioned. @KKtech93 is the one to study if you care about how high-upload Indian channels can still build a clear identity. @GREATWITHAI01 is interesting but tangential. The honest reading of this whole set is that Sandhya's at a fork: keep posting at Shorts volume and fight the per-video math, or borrow some of the niche clarity these competitors have already figured out.
Common questions
Who are @Sandhya-cg1nq's biggest competitors on YouTube?
The closest peers by audience overlap appear to be @Arifrahmanextra (20,200 subs), @Aspirant.Diaries (18,100), and @KKtech93 (19,900) — all Indian creators in the small-to-mid range. @GREATWITHAI01 (22,800 subs, Nigeria) shows up in this competitor set probably through algorithm overlap rather than direct content competition. @LearnWithInterview-Hindi (9,720) is the only channel smaller than Sandhya here, focused on UPSC motivational content. Honestly, the set isn't tightly clustered around one niche, which suggests Sandhya's positioning is broader or less defined than her competitors'.
How does @Sandhya-cg1nq compare to @GREATWITHAI01?
Different worlds, mostly. @GREATWITHAI01 is a Nigerian channel doing AI graphic design tutorials with 22,800 subs across only 155 videos — roughly 147 subs per video, strong long-form efficiency. @Sandhya-cg1nq has 11,500 subs across 3,100 videos, around 3.7 subs per video, the fingerprint of a Shorts-heavy strategy. They probably share some algorithmic surface area through AI-adjacent recommendations, but as competitors they're operating different formats, different languages, and different markets. Not really comparable beyond appearing in the same scraped competitor set.
What channels should I watch alongside @Sandhya-cg1nq?
For viewers, the most natural pairings are @Aspirant.Diaries (cozy aesthetic study content, 18,100 subs) and @Arifrahmanextra (board exam strategy, 20,200 subs) — both Indian, both clearly positioned for student-age audiences. If you like Sandhya's high-volume posting style, @KKtech93 (19,900 subs, 587 videos) runs a similar volume-focused approach but in Hindi tech reviews. @LearnWithInterview-Hindi (9,720) is worth checking if you're specifically interested in UPSC content. @GREATWITHAI01 is more of a stretch unless you're already into AI design tools.
Is @Sandhya-cg1nq the biggest channel in their niche?
No. Within this competitor set, Sandhya's 11,500 subs places fourth out of six, behind @GREATWITHAI01 (22,800), @Arifrahmanextra (20,200), @KKtech93 (19,900), and @Aspirant.Diaries (18,100). Only @LearnWithInterview-Hindi (9,720) is smaller. That said, "niche" is doing a lot of work here — Sandhya's channel description doesn't clearly stake out a category, so it's genuinely hard to say which sub-niche she's actually competing in. Within her loose orbit of small Indian creators, she's mid-pack rather than leading.
What's the difference between @Sandhya-cg1nq and similar creators?
The clearest gap is positioning and per-video efficiency. Sandhya's 3,100 videos for 11,500 subs (3.7 subs per video) reads as a high-output Shorts strategy. Competitors like @Arifrahmanextra (213 subs/video) and @GREATWITHAI01 (147 subs/video) pull much more from each upload because they have a sharper niche and longer formats. Even @KKtech93, who runs comparable volume at 587 videos, manages 34 subs/video by sticking to one clear category — Hindi tech reviews. The pattern across this competitor set is consistent: clearer niche identity tends to mean better per-video math.
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