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Competitor comparison · @Toppscholars

@Toppscholars Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared

@Toppscholars (29,200 subs, 1,500 videos) sits in India's educational content space, with closest scraped competitors being @MilanSinghhh (46,500 subs) and @sameer_dramaa (27,500 subs). The key difference: Toppscholars is high-volume study content while most listed competitors run wealth, shopping, or gaming niches that overlap mainly on India audience demographics.

Channel data · captured May 14, 2026

Handle
@Toppscholars
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

First thing worth saying — the algorithm's similar-channels pick for @Toppscholars is noisy. Toppscholars is an India-based education channel with 1,500 uploads sitting at 29,200 subs, which is a heavy posting cadence (averaging close to one upload per day if active for around four years). The five channels YouTube groups them with mostly aren't education at all. Three are India-based, one's US-based, one's Indonesian, and the unifying thread looks more like 'mid-sized creators targeting young South Asian audiences' than actual content overlap. Worth keeping in mind as we go through each one.

@Jodff27 (31,200 subs, 176 videos) sits closest on subscriber count, but the content gap is huge — they're a Free Fire mobile gaming channel posting daily content with a stated 50K subscriber target. The ratio is interesting: 176 videos for 31K subs means roughly 177 subs per upload, versus Toppscholars's ~19 subs per upload. Gaming clips just convert attention harder than explainer videos do. If you're researching Toppscholars for genuine educational competitor analysis, skip this one. If you're trying to understand which India-based creators are pulling similar demographic eyeballs at the same scale, Jodff27 is the more direct comparison on raw audience size — just not on content.

@MilanSinghhh (46,500 subs, 1,200 videos) is the largest channel in this set and the most thematically adjacent in a stretched-definition way. The bio mentions moving to the US at age 5, becoming self-made, running e-commerce — so this reads as personal-finance and hustle content aimed at students and young adults. It's the only listed competitor with comparable upload volume to Toppscholars (1,200 vs 1,500 videos), suggesting both creators lean on high-frequency posting as their growth lever. Where they split: Milan's content monetizes in ways pure educational explainers usually don't (affiliate, course funnels, brand deals). Worth watching if you're trying to figure out how Toppscholars could diversify revenue without abandoning the student audience.

@sameer_dramaa (27,500 subs, 1,000 videos) is essentially Toppscholars's nearest peer on the volume metric — 1,000 videos to 1,500 — but the niche is daily deals and viral shopping products, with Hindi-mixed copy in the bio. Same posting philosophy (publish constantly, ride algorithmic distribution), entirely different viewer intent. The comparison worth noting is what 1,000+ uploads actually gets you across different niches: ~27 subs per video for sameer_dramaa, ~19 for Toppscholars. Shopping content edges out education on this small sample, which tracks with the broader pattern — affiliate-friendly verticals tend to compound faster than educational ones at smaller scales.

@Ali_Wealth (26,900 subs, 92 videos) is the most efficient channel in the set by a wide margin — 292 subs per video, which is roughly 15x Toppscholars's ratio. The content is Hindi-language wealth-building (stock market basics, saving, rich mindset). If Toppscholars ever wanted a model for moving away from volume-first growth, this is the cleanest case study in the list. Fewer videos, presumably longer-form, niche pulled tight. The audience appetite for Hindi-language financial education in India is well-documented at this point, and probably explains the efficiency. Different content vertical, but the growth pattern is genuinely worth studying.

@nomuricee (40,900 subs, 109 videos) is the outlier and honestly probably shouldn't be in this competitor set. Indonesia-based, aesthetic/lifestyle content judging by the bio (TikTok and Instagram cross-linked, plus a 'coffeestudieess' business email that hints at study-aesthetic adjacency). The connection might just be that 'studies' keyword in the email, or some loose study-vlog overlap on certain uploads. 375 subs per video puts them in the same efficiency tier as Ali_Wealth. If you're a Toppscholars viewer who came for the study aesthetic side of educational content rather than the lecture/explainer side, this is the one worth checking — though the language barrier might be a factor.

If you watch @Toppscholars regularly and want adjacent channels that actually match the educational intent, this scraped set isn't great — only @MilanSinghhh and arguably @Ali_Wealth share any real DNA with study or learning content. The takeaway for Toppscholars themselves: the algorithm is grouping them with high-volume India-based creators across mixed niches, which suggests the discovery surface isn't optimized for educational viewer intent. Tighter topic clustering on uploads might fix that over time.

Common questions

Who are @Toppscholars's biggest competitors on YouTube?

Based on YouTube's similar-channel signals, Toppscholars (29,200 subs) shows up alongside @MilanSinghhh (46,500), @nomuricee (40,900), @Jodff27 (31,200), @sameer_dramaa (27,500), and @Ali_Wealth (26,900). Honestly though, only @MilanSinghhh is a real thematic competitor for educational content. The others are gaming, shopping, lifestyle, and Hindi-language finance respectively. The grouping seems driven more by audience demographic overlap (young India-based viewers) than by content niche overlap. Take 'biggest competitors' with a grain of salt here — the algorithm's cohort isn't a real niche ranking.

How does @Toppscholars compare to @Jodff27?

Different content entirely. @Jodff27 (31,200 subs) is a Free Fire mobile gaming channel with 176 lifetime uploads. Toppscholars is an education channel with 1,500 uploads at 29,200 subs. Jodff27's subs-per-video ratio is around 177 versus Toppscholars's 19 — gaming content monetizes attention way faster than educational content does, at least at this scale. They overlap on raw subscriber count and India audience base, but a viewer of one isn't really the natural audience for the other. The algorithm groups them because of demographic similarity, not content similarity.

What channels should I watch alongside @Toppscholars?

Realistically, if you watch @Toppscholars for actual study help, the scraped competitor set isn't ideal. @MilanSinghhh (46,500 subs) is the closest thematic match — personal finance and self-improvement content aimed at students. @Ali_Wealth (26,900 subs, Hindi-language wealth basics) is a decent secondary pick if you read Hindi and want adjacent financial-literacy content. The other three (Jodff27 for Free Fire gaming, sameer_dramaa for shopping deals, nomuricee for Indonesian lifestyle) don't really overlap on educational intent. Better discovery probably comes from searching specific subjects you care about than following this similar-channel list.

Is @Toppscholars the biggest channel in their niche?

Not really. In this scraped set of five competitors, @Toppscholars (29,200 subs) is fourth-largest — behind @MilanSinghhh (46,500), @nomuricee (40,900), and @Jodff27 (31,200), but ahead of @sameer_dramaa (27,500) and @Ali_Wealth (26,900). However, this isn't a real niche ranking because most of these channels aren't actually in the education niche. Within India-based YouTube education specifically, there are much larger channels (Khan Academy India, Unacademy, PhysicsWallah, etc.) that don't appear in this similar-channels grouping. Toppscholars is mid-sized within the algorithm's chosen cohort.

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

The volume strategy is what sets Toppscholars apart in this set. 1,500 lifetime uploads is more than every competitor here except @MilanSinghhh (1,200) and @sameer_dramaa (1,000) — and well above @Ali_Wealth (92), @nomuricee (109), and @Jodff27 (176). Toppscholars is clearly running a high-frequency posting strategy that suits educational content (lots of topics to cover, evergreen searchability). The flip side: subs-per-video efficiency is low compared to niche-focused channels like Ali_Wealth at 292 subs per upload. Different bets on different growth levers, and the volume play is harder to sustain long-term.

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