@Sierra_sp Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels (2026 Analysis)
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@Sierra_sp (1,680 subs, 286 videos) sits in a small-channel cluster that includes @Kontextkern (1,660), @SmylesFN (1,260), and @codingoblin (2,380). The set isn't tightly themed — it's grouped more by subscriber tier than niche, with @SmylesFN being the closest gaming overlap.
Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026
- Handle
- @Sierra_sp
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
Honestly, the most defensible thing to say about this competitor set is that it's loose. Sierra_sp's description is in Spanish, jokes about a "NASA computer" that can't run more than 2fps — that's classic Spanish-speaking gamer humor. Put next to a German AI-workflow channel, an Indian channel with no real description, and a UK build-in-public coder, and you have a group held together by subscriber count more than topic. That's normal for the 1K-3K range. YouTube's similarity signals get noisy down here because watch-history overlap matters more than topical match, and small channels often get clustered with whatever the algorithm decides looks demographically adjacent.
@Kontextkern (1,660 subs, 44 videos, Germany) is almost an exact sub match with Sierra_sp. Where the channels diverge is video count — Kontextkern has 44 uploads, Sierra_sp has 286. That's a 6.5x ratio. Kontextkern is making fewer, longer-form, more polished AI-tutorial videos (ChatGPT, Gemini benchmarks for work and study contexts). Sierra_sp's 286 videos at 1,680 subs suggests rapid-fire short-form output, probably gameplay clips. Follow Kontextkern if you want serious AI workflow content; the audience overlap with Sierra_sp is probably near zero.
@DramaDrop-agasdg (2,390 subs, 140 videos, US) has a description that's just "More about this channel" — placeholder text, which usually means the channel hasn't bothered filling it in or runs faceless content. The handle suggests drama commentary or aggregation. 140 videos for 2,390 subs works out to roughly 17 subs per upload, which isn't bad for faceless content. Different audience entirely from Sierra_sp though — English-speaking, US-based, drama niche. Subscribe if you specifically want creator-drama coverage; you won't see any cross-pollination from Sierra_sp.
@codingoblin (2,380 subs, 128 videos, UK) is a build-in-public online business channel. The "wins, flops, real numbers" framing is the hook, and it works — indiehacker audiences like watching real solopreneurs show their math. 128 videos for 2,380 subs is roughly 19 subs per upload, similar efficiency to DramaDrop. Almost no audience overlap with Sierra_sp unless Sierra_sp's viewers happen to be tech-curious Spanish speakers who watch English business content. Worth following on its own merits if that's your interest, but not because of Sierra_sp.
@HeyMythX (3,150 subs, 76 videos, India) is the biggest channel in the comparison set. 76 videos to hit 3,150 subs works out to roughly 41 subs per upload — best efficiency by a wide margin. Description is placeholder, so I can't see what the angle is from outside. The India + small video count + strong sub rate combo often points to either reactions, gaming commentary, or a specific entertainment format that travels well. If their content is gameplay-driven without much talking, there could be some Sierra_sp overlap; otherwise probably not.
@SmylesFN (1,260 subs, 534 videos, US) is the closest topical match in this list. Fortnite, short edits, gaming grind. 534 videos at 1,260 subs is brutal — only 2.4 subs per upload — but that's the gaming-shorts reality for most channels in this tier. Sierra_sp's 286 videos at 1,680 subs sits in the same general pattern: high output, modest growth. The "NASA computer" joke in Sierra_sp's bio fits the SmylesFN demographic almost perfectly (gamers, short-form, self-deprecating humor about hardware). This is the one real peer in the set.
If you watch Sierra_sp, the only channel in this list worth actively also subscribing to is @SmylesFN. The other four are different audiences entirely — German AI tutorials, US drama aggregation, UK build-in-public business, an India-based channel of unclear genre — that landed in this similarity cluster because of subscriber count and recency rather than any shared viewer base. Sierra_sp's actual closest peers are almost certainly other Spanish-language gaming creators in the 1K-5K range, and those would show up better in a country-filtered search than in YouTube's default similar-channel signal.
Common questions
Who are @Sierra_sp's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Honestly, in terms of real topical competitors based on this scrape, the closest is @SmylesFN (1,260 subs) — both run high-output gaming content with self-deprecating humor about hardware. The other four channels in the similarity cluster (@Kontextkern, @DramaDrop-agasdg, @codingoblin, @HeyMythX) sit in totally different niches: AI tutorials, drama commentary, build-in-public business, and an India-based channel of unclear genre. They share subscriber tier with Sierra_sp (everyone in this set is between 1,260 and 3,150 subs) but not audience. The real competitive set is probably other Spanish-language gaming creators not surfaced here.
How does @Sierra_sp compare to @Kontextkern?
Sub counts are almost identical — Sierra_sp at 1,680, Kontextkern at 1,660 — but that's where the similarity ends. Kontextkern has 44 videos focused on serious AI workflow tutorials (ChatGPT, Gemini benchmarks in German), aimed at professionals and students. Sierra_sp has 286 videos, runs in Spanish, and the bio jokes about hardware limitations in a way that reads gaming-adjacent. Different language, different country, different content vertical, six-and-a-half times the upload count. The only real common ground is they both sit in the sub-2K range. If you watch one, the other won't show up in your sidebar for a reason.
What channels should I watch alongside @Sierra_sp?
From this comparison set, only @SmylesFN (1,260 subs, 534 videos, Fortnite shorts) makes sense as a watch-alongside pick. Same general pattern: high upload count, gaming content, modest subscriber growth, self-deprecating humor. The other four — @Kontextkern, @DramaDrop-agasdg, @codingoblin, @HeyMythX — are different audiences and you'd be following them for different reasons entirely. If you want more channels in Sierra_sp's actual lane, search YouTube directly for Spanish-language gaming creators in the 1K-5K range; the country filter will surface peers that algorithmic similarity signals miss.
Is @Sierra_sp the biggest channel in their niche?
Probably not, but it's hard to say from this scrape because the similarity set isn't tightly niched. Within this specific 5-channel comparison, @HeyMythX leads at 3,150 subs and @Sierra_sp sits in the middle at 1,680. But the real Sierra_sp niche — Spanish-language gaming or short-form gameplay content — has plenty of channels in the 10K-100K range that didn't surface here because YouTube's similarity engine pulled from a broader pool. Inside the 1K-2K subscriber tier with 280+ uploads, Sierra_sp is competitive on volume but not on growth efficiency.
What's the difference between @Sierra_sp and similar creators?
The clearest differentiator is upload pattern. Sierra_sp has 286 videos at 1,680 subs (about 5.9 subs per video), which lands in the middle of the pack here. @SmylesFN goes harder on volume (534 videos, 2.4 subs/video). @Kontextkern goes the opposite direction (44 videos, 38 subs/video). @HeyMythX has the strongest efficiency at 41 subs/video on 76 uploads. So Sierra_sp's strategy reads as moderate-volume, modest-conversion — typical for a Spanish-language gaming channel in the 1K-3K range. Whether that's the right strategy depends on whether the content is genuinely entertaining; the numbers alone won't tell you.
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