@Sideye-24 Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Analyzed (2026)
Free creator diagnostic
Run a free YouTube channel audit on your own channel
Paste your channel handle and get a free read of the bottleneck holding back your Shorts, uploads, or channel positioning. No signup and no card for the first read.
@Sideye-24 (19,500 subs, 31 videos) sits in a loosely grouped peer set including @Autolykus (21,800 subs, NA League Challenger) and @MachoRushDrama (30,600 subs, Chinese short dramas). The differentiator: Sideye-24's 31-video catalog yields ~629 subs per upload, far above traditional uploaders like @Autolykus (~28/video).
Channel data · captured Jun 18, 2026
- Handle
- @Sideye-24
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
First thing worth noting — this is an unusually wide competitor set. The fact that YouTube's related-channels signal threw together a Chinese drama clipper, an NA Challenger League player, an Indian educator, and a Fortnite grinder tells me Sideye-24 either has a young or genre-jumping catalog, or the algorithm is still feeling out where to slot them. At only 31 videos and 19.5K subs, the channel is at the early "the algo doesn't fully know me yet" stage. The thread connecting these channels might just be the mid-tier subscriber band — most sit in the 12K–33K range — rather than niche alignment.
@Autolykus runs 21,800 subs on a 783-video catalog — almost the opposite profile to Sideye-24's 31. Autolykus is a US-based League of Legends player who's been NA Challenger since Season 6 and hit Rank 1 in Season 9, currently working a Sett/Mordekaiser/Darius pool. That's a gameplay-skill identity built over years of consistent uploads. At ~28 subs per video, they're playing the long game — every upload contributes a small slice. Sideye-24's ~629 subs-per-video ratio says something completely different: fewer, higher-impact uploads (likely Shorts or viral clips). Follow Autolykus if you want technical League play from a top-ranked NA player — a completely different niche from anything I can infer about Sideye-24 from the data here.
@SchoolDayzGamerz-yn5pt sits at 12,300 subs and has shipped 987 videos — a 12 subs/video ratio, meaning they're grinding volume without much per-video lift. India-based, focus is retro/old video games and school-day nostalgia. The bio is sincere ("I always miss my school days") and that's part of the charm. Compared to Sideye-24, the cadence is wildly different: SchoolDayz has been treating uploads as cheap, Sideye-24 has been treating them as scarce. If your view of growth is "post more, slowly compound an audience that finds you eventually," SchoolDayz is the model. Worth following alongside Sideye-24 if you specifically enjoy retro/old gaming content. Not really overlapping otherwise.
The closest structural match to Sideye-24's efficiency profile is @MachoRushDrama — 30,600 subs on just 67 videos, or ~457 subs per upload. Taiwan-based, Chinese-language, posting daily-update short-drama compilations ("热血短剧" — hot-blooded short dramas, underdog/revenge arcs). The model is short-form clips of vertical micro-dramas, one of the fastest-growing content formats in Chinese-speaking markets right now. If Sideye-24 is in the short-form clip-aggregation business too, this is the most structurally similar channel in the set. The audiences likely don't overlap (different language, different region), but the playbook does. Watch MachoRush if you're trying to reverse-engineer how short-drama channels scale fast on low video counts.
@NemFN has 12,500 subs on 1,500 videos — roughly 8 subs per upload. US-based, the "FN" in the handle is almost certainly Fortnite, and the bio is just "Subscribe=🍪," which is the energy of a Shorts channel run by a teenager. This is the highest-volume, lowest-efficiency profile in the set. The interesting comparison with Sideye-24 isn't content — it's posture. NemFN is throwing pasta at the wall; Sideye-24 has been selective. Both models can work. NemFN's path requires staying online forever; Sideye-24's depends on each upload landing. Follow NemFN if you want Fortnite gameplay shorts in the casual American teen lane.
@easy2learning is the biggest channel in the set at 32,600 subs, with a 4,000-video catalog (~8 subs per video). India-based, education-focused — concept explainers in the "make it easy" tutorial vein. With 4,000 uploads they've clearly been running for years, probably across multiple subjects. The contrast with Sideye-24 here is total: educational channels build through search demand (students googling "trigonometry explained") while whatever Sideye-24 is doing reads more like algorithmic short-form discovery. If you want to study how Indian edu channels build huge catalogs around evergreen syllabi, easy2learning is a clean example. Almost zero behavioral overlap with Sideye-24's audience though.
If you actually watch @Sideye-24, the channel in this set worth tracking is @MachoRushDrama — the upload economics match (high subs-per-video, low total count, short-form lean). The rest of the set is a reminder that YouTube's related-channel algorithm groups by audience signal more than topical similarity. Sideye-24's biggest open question isn't competition — it's whether the next 30 uploads keep the per-video conversion rate, because at 19.5K subs and 31 videos there isn't much catalog momentum yet. The next handful of uploads matter disproportionately.
Common questions
Who are @Sideye-24's biggest competitors on YouTube?
The related-channel set YouTube is currently surfacing for @Sideye-24 includes @Autolykus (21,800 subs, League of Legends), @MachoRushDrama (30,600 subs, Chinese short-drama clips), @easy2learning (32,600 subs, Indian education), @NemFN (12,500 subs, Fortnite shorts), and @SchoolDayzGamerz-yn5pt (12,300 subs, retro gaming). It's a wider niche spread than most competitor sets, which tells you Sideye-24's content fingerprint isn't fully defined yet — only 31 videos in. The real direct competitors will sharpen as their upload count grows past the algorithm's confidence threshold.
How does @Sideye-24 compare to @Autolykus?
The two channels look nothing alike under the hood. @Autolykus has 21,800 subs across 783 videos (~28 subs per upload) — a long-grind, gameplay-skill channel built around being NA Challenger in League of Legends since Season 6. @Sideye-24 has 19,500 subs across just 31 videos (~629 subs per upload), which is the signature of short-form viral content rather than long-grind gameplay. Similar subscriber count, completely different production model. If Autolykus is a marathon, Sideye-24 looks more like a sprint-then-coast model. They probably don't share viewers.
What channels should I watch alongside @Sideye-24?
Of this set, @MachoRushDrama is the closest structural match — 30,600 subs on 67 videos works out to ~457 subs per upload, the only other "low video count, high per-video lift" profile in the group. If you're interested in how short-form clip channels scale fast on small catalogs, MachoRush is the most useful comparison. The rest of the set covers different formats (long-form gameplay, education tutorials, Fortnite shorts) that won't behave like Sideye-24. So: MachoRushDrama for playbook similarity, the others mainly if you happen to enjoy their topic.
Is @Sideye-24 the biggest channel in their niche?
No — @Sideye-24 (19,500 subs) sits in the middle of this peer set. @easy2learning is the largest at 32,600 subs, followed by @MachoRushDrama at 30,600 and @Autolykus at 21,800. Below Sideye-24 are @NemFN (12,500) and @SchoolDayzGamerz-yn5pt (12,300). That mid-pack position isn't necessarily a competitive signal though, because these channels aren't really competing for the same viewers — they're just grouped by YouTube's similarity model. Sideye-24's actual "biggest channel in niche" question only becomes answerable once their niche is clearer from more uploads.
What's the difference between @Sideye-24 and similar creators?
The single biggest gap is upload count vs subscriber count. @Sideye-24 has 19,500 subs on 31 videos. Most channels in this set have 700+ videos (Autolykus 783, SchoolDayz 987, NemFN 1,500, easy2learning 4,000). Only @MachoRushDrama follows the same scarcity model (67 videos, 30,600 subs). That tells you Sideye-24 is either making short-form content that pops algorithmically, or it's a newer channel that grew quickly and hasn't built out a deep catalog yet. The per-video efficiency is real — ~629 subs per upload is well above the rest of the set.
Free creator diagnostic
Run a free YouTube channel audit on your own channel
Paste your channel handle and get a free read of the bottleneck holding back your Shorts, uploads, or channel positioning. No signup and no card for the first read.