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Competitor comparison · @SravaniVibes

@SravaniVibes Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Analyzed

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@SravaniVibes (3,490 subs, 317 videos) sits in the small Indian lifestyle creator tier, with closest neighbors @FUFAFullFacts (3,040 subs) and @gurustudyvlogs9276 (5,540 subs). The real differentiator is content focus — SravaniVibes runs a multi-vertical lifestyle channel while most competitors pulled here target single niches like facts, study, or gaming.

Channel data · captured Jun 19, 2026

Handle
@SravaniVibes
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

Quick caveat before digging in: SravaniVibes describes itself as a kitchen/garden/beauty/travel/vlogs channel — basically the everything-lifestyle bucket that's pretty common among Indian solo creators. The competitor set surfaced here isn't a perfect niche match (none of these channels are doing the same kitchen-plus-travel-plus-beauty mix), but they're all small Indian creators sitting in the 2K–5.5K sub range with hundreds of uploads behind them. So the useful comparison isn't really "same niche" — it's "what does the climb to 5K look like for solo Indian creators in 2026." That's the lens to use reading the rest of this.

@ParikshaSansar (2,130 subs, 281 videos) is the closest in upload volume but completely different in content angle. They run a Hindi-medium competitive exam prep channel — UPSC, SSC, that kind of vertical. They're a hair smaller than SravaniVibes despite a similar video count, which usually points to a tougher monetization niche. Exam prep has insane creator supply in India right now. Worth watching if you want to see how a study channel structures its weekly uploads, but they're not a content rival to a lifestyle channel. Honestly, the only thing SravaniVibes really shares with them is the audience-region overlap.

@FUFAFullFacts (3,040 subs, 236 videos) is the closest in size — basically the same tier as SravaniVibes. They do Hinglish "facts" / curiosity content, the "wait, what?!" Shorts-friendly format you see everywhere now. This is a totally different bet from lifestyle. Facts channels scale fast on Shorts but tend to plateau hard once the algorithm picks its favorites in that subgenre. If SravaniVibes is going long-form lifestyle and FUFA is going short-form facts, they're not really fighting for the same minutes of watch time. Useful to follow if you want to see what high-velocity Shorts cadence looks like at this sub tier.

@Freyaislive (4,100 subs, 581 videos) is the gaming outlier in this set — and probably the most informative one to study. 581 uploads to land at 4.1K subs is a lot of swings per sub, which is pretty normal for gaming. Gaming has the worst sub-per-view ratio of any niche; viewers binge but don't subscribe. Different audience, different content rhythm, different everything. The takeaway for SravaniVibes isn't to copy them, it's to notice the volume gap: Freyaislive has roughly 1.8x the uploads but only 1.2x the subs. Lifestyle generally converts viewers to subscribers better than gaming does, and SravaniVibes's ratio actually shows it.

@abheyparsad2017 (2,450 subs, 360 videos) is the devotional channel in this comparison — looks like Radha-Krishna content from the #radhikakanha tag. This is the closest niche overlap to SravaniVibes in spirit. Both lean toward a spiritual/family/home-vibe Indian viewer base, even though the content surface is different. 360 videos for 2,450 subs is a slower per-video curve than SravaniVibes's 317-for-3,490 ratio, which actually says something quietly nice about SravaniVibes's lifestyle mix — the variety might be converting better than a single-vertical devotional channel. Worth checking their thumbnail style if you're optimizing for the same family-Indian audience.

@gurustudyvlogs9276 (5,540 subs, 2,200 videos) is the biggest channel in this set and the most extreme upload-pace outlier by a mile. 2,200 videos is wild — that's roughly 7x SravaniVibes's count for less than 2x the subs. This is a "high volume, low margin" strategy and it almost always points to Shorts farming or a churn-and-burn cadence. If you're SravaniVibes, the lesson is the opposite direction: 317 videos for 3,490 subs is a much healthier per-video sub conversion than what gurustudyvlogs is pulling. Quality density is doing more work for SravaniVibes than people usually give it credit for at this sub tier.

If you watch SravaniVibes regularly, the most natural co-watch from this list is probably @abheyparsad2017 — overlapping family-Indian audience vibe, similar small-creator scale. @FUFAFullFacts is the one to study for format ideas if you ever want to plug Shorts into a lifestyle channel. The rest are tangential. None of these are real "rivals" pulling the same viewers away — SravaniVibes is in a slightly orphan position with the kitchen/garden/beauty/travel combo, which is both a discovery problem (the algorithm doesn't quite know what to recommend you next to) and a quiet opportunity (less direct competition once a viewer finds you).

Common questions

Who are @SravaniVibes's biggest competitors on YouTube?

Honestly, SravaniVibes doesn't have a clean direct-rival list because the kitchen/garden/beauty/travel mix is unusually broad. The closest in size from this set are @FUFAFullFacts (3,040 subs) and @gurustudyvlogs9276 (5,540 subs), but neither shares the lifestyle angle. The closest in audience vibe is @abheyparsad2017 (2,450 subs), which leans devotional and family. So "biggest competitor" depends what you mean — same audience, same size, or same content. None of these match all three, which is itself an interesting position to sit in as a small creator.

How does @SravaniVibes compare to @ParikshaSansar?

They're roughly the same upload count (317 vs 281 videos) but completely different niches. SravaniVibes is multi-vertical lifestyle, ParikshaSansar is Hindi-medium competitive exam prep. SravaniVibes has about 64% more subs (3,490 vs 2,130), which is partly content-niche related — exam prep has brutal creator competition in Indian YouTube right now, while lifestyle has more white space for personality-driven channels. They share regional audience and small-creator scale, but you wouldn't really watch one looking for content like the other. Different worlds, even though the sub counts and video counts look similar from a distance.

What channels should I watch alongside @SravaniVibes?

From this set, @abheyparsad2017 is the closest in audience vibe — both lean toward an Indian family viewer base with home and spiritual content. @FUFAFullFacts is worth a follow if you want short-form facts content in Hinglish. The other three (gaming, exam prep, high-volume study vlogs) don't really co-watch with SravaniVibes naturally. Honestly, the better co-watches probably aren't in this set — try searching for actual Indian kitchen and garden creators or "daily vlog Telugu/Hindi" adjacent terms to find tighter recommendations. The algorithm currently sees SravaniVibes as orphan-niche, which makes organic co-watch discovery harder than it should be.

Is @SravaniVibes the biggest channel in their niche?

No, and the niche question is genuinely messy here. At 3,490 subs SravaniVibes is mid-pack within this comparison set, behind @Freyaislive (4,100 subs) and @gurustudyvlogs9276 (5,540 subs). But none of those compete on lifestyle content. Within actual Indian lifestyle and kitchen YouTube, there are channels with hundreds of thousands or millions of subs (Nisha Madhulika, Hebbar's Kitchen, the big regional vlogger names) so SravaniVibes is firmly in the small-creator tier of that broader niche. The 5K subscriber mark is the next visible plateau worth aiming at from where they currently sit.

What's the difference between @SravaniVibes and similar creators?

The clearest differentiator: SravaniVibes runs a multi-vertical channel (kitchen + garden + beauty + travel + vlogs) while every channel in this comparison set runs a single niche — exam prep, facts, gaming, devotional, or high-volume study. Multi-vertical is risky on YouTube because the algorithm struggles to categorize you, but it can also build a more loyal personality-driven audience over time. The 317-videos-for-3,490-subs ratio is actually decent for that strategy. If SravaniVibes ever wants to break the 10K wall, picking one or two of those verticals to lead with on the channel page would probably help discoverability a lot.

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