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Competitor comparison · @SuperZeplay

@SuperZeplay Competitors: 5 YouTube Channels in the Same Range

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@SuperZeplay sits at 11,700 subs with 826 videos — a mobile-gaming tips/glitches channel out of the US. The closest scraped peers by size are @B.MCartoon-k6q (16,700), @tradethepool (14,500), and @BeyondTheScreenn (11,600). The honest catch: only a couple actually overlap in niche.

Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026

Handle
@SuperZeplay
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

Looking at this lineup, here's what jumps out before anything else: most of these "competitors" don't actually compete with @SuperZeplay on niche. @SuperZeplay is clearly a mobile-gaming channel — the description leads with "Code: ZEPLAY" and lists glitches, tips, gameplay, which is the standard pattern for Free Fire / similar mobile-shooter creators. Their career timeline (1st upload March 2021, 1k subs by August 2022, 1M views by October 2023) reads like a creator-program affiliate grinding shorts and tips videos. The five "similar" channels the scrape returned share a sub band (~7K–17K) but mostly live in finance, cartoons, and tech. So this is less a niche-competitor analysis and more a "who's at the same career stage" comparison — useful if you're benchmarking growth, just not the audience overlap you might expect.

@tradethepool sits at 14,500 subs with 1,600 videos — almost double @SuperZeplay's count, but they're a US-based prop firm channel pushing day-trading content under the Trade The Pool brand. The 1,600 videos is wild for that sub count; my read is they're uploading short market recaps or daily commentary, where volume is high but per-video reach stays narrow. @SuperZeplay's 826 videos to 11,700 subs gives them a meaningfully better subs-per-video ratio (~14 vs ~9), which actually says their content lands harder per upload. If you're a trader, watch them. If you came here for gaming, you already know — not a real competitor, just a similar growth-stage channel from the same country.

@BhaveshMakwana-f4z at 7,830 subs with only 35 videos is the most interesting data point in this set. That's roughly 224 subs per video — by far the highest ratio in the comparison group, including @SuperZeplay's ~14. With a near-empty channel description ("More about this channel") and an opaque handle, it's hard to tell what they actually post, but the velocity is there. For @SuperZeplay specifically, this is the kind of channel worth watching not to follow as a peer but to study: getting that many subs from 35 uploads usually means a couple of videos broke out hard. Worth checking what those are if you can find them — pattern-matching breakouts in your sub-band is one of the few free competitive signals on YouTube.

@Thegauravrai1, 9,630 subs and 319 videos out of India, is squarely in the Indian stock-market education space — fundamentals, technicals, mutual funds, IPOs. Different country, different niche, different monetization (Indian finance YouTube leans heavily on course sales and brokerage affiliate codes). The relevant comparison to @SuperZeplay isn't audience, it's discipline: 319 videos to 9,630 subs means ~30 subs per video, well below @SuperZeplay's pace despite being in a high-CPM niche. Indian creators usually have an easier time stacking subs because of the market size, so seeing them under @SuperZeplay on subs-per-video is a small data point suggesting the gaming-tips angle is converting better than it might look from the outside.

@B.MCartoon-k6q is the biggest of the set at 16,700 subs across 239 videos. Cartoon content, near-empty description ("Welcome to my channel please 20k subscribe"), so kid-targeted animation if I had to guess. ~70 subs per video, roughly 5x @SuperZeplay's ratio. The lesson here for a gaming-tips creator isn't to copy the format — it's that kids-cartoon content compounds because of repeat watch behavior YouTube specifically rewards. @SuperZeplay's audience overlap with them is almost nothing, but if you're benchmarking why some 200-video channels pull more subs than 800-video channels, this is a clean illustration: format-fit matters more than upload count.

@BeyondTheScreenn (Ashwin, 11,600 subs, 124 videos, India) is the closest sub-count match to @SuperZeplay in this whole list — about 100 subs apart. He posts casual tech commentary out of India. The contrast is in upload pace: 124 videos vs 826 to land at essentially the same sub count means his subs-per-video is roughly 94, around 6.5x @SuperZeplay's. That's the gap between a quality-leaning English-language tech niche and a high-volume mobile-gaming-tips strategy. Neither is wrong — they're different YouTube games. But if @SuperZeplay wants to understand why some channels grow on a fraction of the uploads, this is a useful real-time benchmark to track.

If you watch @SuperZeplay, the honest recommendation is that none of these five are obvious "next watches" for you — the scrape grouped them by size, not by content. The two takeaways worth keeping: @BhaveshMakwana-f4z's lopsided sub-per-video ratio is unusual enough to be worth a look, and @BeyondTheScreenn is the only channel here you might actually enjoy if you're a tech-curious gamer. For @SuperZeplay themselves, the more useful comparison set would be other Free Fire or mobile-shooter tips channels in the 5K–25K range — the data here mostly confirms their upload-volume strategy is producing fewer subs per video than format-led peers, which is worth thinking about for late-2026 strategy.

Common questions

Who are @SuperZeplay's biggest competitors on YouTube?

Honestly, the scraped competitor set for @SuperZeplay is a mixed bag — the channels surfaced (@tradethepool, @BhaveshMakwana-f4z, @Thegauravrai1, @B.MCartoon-k6q, @BeyondTheScreenn) share their ~7K–17K subscriber range but mostly live in different niches like trading, cartoons, and tech. @SuperZeplay is a mobile gaming tips/glitches channel, so their actual direct competitors would be other Free Fire-style creators in the same range, which this scrape didn't return. By raw sub count, @B.MCartoon-k6q (16,700) and @tradethepool (14,500) are biggest. By same-niche overlap? None of these are a clean match.

How does @SuperZeplay compare to @tradethepool?

They're not really comparable on content — @SuperZeplay is a mobile gaming channel and @tradethepool is a US-based day-trading prop firm. On the data, though, the comparison is sharper. @tradethepool has 14,500 subs across 1,600 videos (roughly 9 subs per video). @SuperZeplay has 11,700 subs across 826 videos (~14 per video). Despite being smaller on absolute subs, @SuperZeplay is converting harder per upload. The other thing worth noting: @tradethepool's 1,600 videos suggests a daily-recap or market-commentary cadence, which is a fundamentally different upload strategy than gaming tips.

What channels should I watch alongside @SuperZeplay?

From this specific scraped set, the honest answer is "probably none of them" if you came to @SuperZeplay for mobile gaming tips and glitches. The other channels lean finance (@tradethepool, @Thegauravrai1), kids cartoons (@B.MCartoon-k6q), and tech (@BeyondTheScreenn). If you want adjacent watches that actually match the niche, look for other Free Fire or mobile shooter tips channels in the 5K–25K subscriber range — that's where the real audience overlap sits. @BeyondTheScreenn is the only one here that might cross over if you're a gamer who also enjoys casual English-language tech content out of India.

Is @SuperZeplay the biggest channel in their niche?

No — not by a long shot, and they wouldn't claim to be. At 11,700 subscribers, @SuperZeplay sits in the small-to-mid range of mobile gaming creators. In this scraped peer set they're actually middle of the pack (third by sub count, behind @B.MCartoon-k6q at 16,700 and @tradethepool at 14,500). But this set isn't really their niche. In the actual Free Fire tips/glitches space, top channels regularly run six and seven figures in subs. The 1M views milestone in October 2023 from their bio puts them in the working-creator tier, not the niche-leader tier.

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

The most concrete difference is upload-volume strategy. @SuperZeplay has shipped 826 videos to land 11,700 subs — heavy volume, gaming-tips format. Compare that to @BeyondTheScreenn (124 videos, 11,600 subs) or @B.MCartoon-k6q (239 videos, 16,700 subs), and you see a clear pattern: format-led channels in tech or kids content tend to pull more subs per upload than high-volume tips channels. Neither approach is wrong, but it shapes what each creator's day looks like. @SuperZeplay's flywheel is shorts and tips on volume; the others bet on fewer, higher-impact uploads.

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