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Competitor comparison · @UmairKhalid07

@UmairKhalid07 Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared

@UmairKhalid07 (2,350 subs, 54 videos) sits in a crowded tier of small-to-mid coding and tech creators. The closest competitors by size are @viral_coder (1,200 subs) and @youthgamingnihar6942 (2,490 subs), while @Codemyhobby (4,520 subs) and @EverythingDoWithAI (3,700 subs) lead the pack on volume.

Channel data · captured May 14, 2026

Handle
@UmairKhalid07
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

The competitor set here is interesting because it's not one tidy niche — it's the messy overlap zone where small South-Asian and African creators making coding, gaming, and AI-adjacent content all end up competing for the same recommendation slots. @UmairKhalid07 out of Pakistan with 2,350 subs and 54 videos is squarely in the early-grind tier. The channels surfacing as similar share more than topic: they share the algorithmic profile of channels chasing their first 10K. Worth pointing out — none of these creators are dominant in their space yet, so this comparison is really about who's pulling ahead and why.

@Codemyhobby (4,520 subs, 272 videos, Nigeria) is the most-developed channel in this set by a wide margin. 272 videos against UmairKhalid07's 54 is roughly 5x the publishing output, and that's probably the single biggest reason for the sub gap. Their description is also notably clearer — explicit positioning around web design crash courses and CSS/JavaScript projects. UmairKhalid07's description is just "Dream 100k Subscribers, Support me guys" with no content promise. If you're a viewer specifically hunting structured web dev tutorials, Codemyhobby is the more obvious destination. Follow them if you want tutorial depth; follow UmairKhalid07 if you're tracking an earlier-stage creator.

@viral_coder (1,200 subs, 265 videos, India) is the volume play that hasn't broken out yet. 265 videos for 1,200 subs is roughly 4.5 subs per video — which honestly suggests the upload-more strategy has a ceiling without a clearer hook. Their description ("Stay tuned for awesome videos") tells you nothing about what they make. Compared to UmairKhalid07's 54 videos for 2,350 subs (~43 subs per video), Umair's per-upload conversion is dramatically better. That's the kind of stat that's easy to misread — could just be variance at this size — but it does suggest UmairKhalid07's individual videos land harder, even if there are fewer of them.

@onlyoyelmax (3,340 subs, 154 videos, country unclear) is the odd one out. The description is mostly ASCII-art begging for subs, which makes it hard to tell what the channel actually is about from the outside. 154 videos for 3,340 subs puts them ahead of UmairKhalid07 on both axes but without a clear niche signal. Honestly, I'd watch them more as a case study in how raw consistency can still build a base even without obvious positioning. For a competitor scout, this one's more of a noise channel than a direct rival — appears in similar-channel sets because of size, not because of overlap in content.

@youthgamingnihar6942 (2,490 subs, 542 videos, India) is the gaming-shorts churn machine of the group. 542 videos is by far the highest count in this competitor set — roughly 10x UmairKhalid07's output — and they only have 140 more subs to show for it. The Minecraft Logic shorts angle is a totally different content lane than what UmairKhalid07 appears to be doing, so this is less of a head-to-head and more of an algorithmic neighbor. They show up as similar because the audience demographic (Hindi-speaking South Asian viewers, mobile-first) overlaps. Follow Nihar if Minecraft shorts are your thing; the format crossover with UmairKhalid07 is probably minimal.

@EverythingDoWithAI (3,700 subs, 426 videos, India) is the sharpest-positioned channel in the set. Ajay's description spells out exactly who it's for: GATE/B.Tech students who want to use AI to crack exams and learn high-paying skills. That kind of audience clarity is rare at this scale, and it's likely the main reason they're at 3,700 subs with steady output. UmairKhalid07's positioning is much vaguer by comparison — "Dream 100k" isn't a value prop. The lesson watching these side-by-side is that descriptions matter more than people give them credit for: EverythingDoWithAI tells a viewer in two lines whether to subscribe.

If you watch @UmairKhalid07, the natural companion subs are probably @Codemyhobby for actual structured tutorials and @EverythingDoWithAI for the AI-and-skills angle done with clearer audience targeting. The rest of the set is closer in size but further in execution. Worth checking back on this list in six months — at this stage, any of these channels could pull ahead with one breakout video, and the rankings would scramble.

Common questions

Who are @UmairKhalid07's biggest competitors on YouTube?

The closest competitors by size and audience overlap are @viral_coder (1,200 subs) just below and @youthgamingnihar6942 (2,490 subs) just above. The larger channels in their similar-channel cluster are @Codemyhobby (4,520 subs) and @EverythingDoWithAI (3,700 subs), both with significantly more uploads — 272 and 426 videos respectively, versus UmairKhalid07's 54. @onlyoyelmax (3,340 subs) also appears in the set but with less clear positioning. So the competition is mostly small-to-mid South Asian and African creators all chasing their first 10K subs.

How does @UmairKhalid07 compare to @Codemyhobby?

@Codemyhobby has roughly 2x the subs (4,520 vs 2,350) and 5x the video count (272 vs 54). They're based in Nigeria and have explicit positioning around web design and JavaScript crash courses. UmairKhalid07's description doesn't communicate a content niche the same way. On a per-video basis though, UmairKhalid07 is actually converting better — about 43 subs per upload versus Codemyhobby's ~17. That suggests Umair's individual videos may be landing harder, but Codemyhobby's library effect is winning the long game.

What channels should I watch alongside @UmairKhalid07?

If you're following @UmairKhalid07 for the coding/tech angle, the most worthwhile companion subs are @Codemyhobby for actual structured tutorial content and @EverythingDoWithAI if you want clearer AI-and-skills positioning aimed at students. @viral_coder is similar in style but smaller and less developed. @youthgamingnihar6942 is mostly Minecraft shorts so the overlap is more demographic than topical — worth a sub if you're into that lane too. Honestly, watching this whole cluster gives you a decent snapshot of what's working (and not) at the sub-5K tier in this space.

Is @UmairKhalid07 the biggest channel in their niche?

No, not within this competitor set. @Codemyhobby leads at 4,520 subs, followed by @EverythingDoWithAI at 3,700 and @onlyoyelmax at 3,340. UmairKhalid07 sits in the middle at 2,350 subs, ahead of @viral_coder (1,200) but behind @youthgamingnihar6942 (2,490). The gap to the leader is roughly 2x, which is real but not huge — one or two breakout videos could close it. None of these channels are dominant though, so the niche is still wide open at this tier.

What's the difference between @UmairKhalid07 and similar creators?

The most observable difference is video count versus subscriber yield. UmairKhalid07 has 54 videos for 2,350 subs, which is unusually efficient compared to @viral_coder (265 videos for 1,200 subs) or @youthgamingnihar6942 (542 videos for 2,490 subs). The flip side is the established channels like @Codemyhobby and @EverythingDoWithAI have much clearer descriptions stating exactly what the channel is about, while UmairKhalid07's bio is just a subscriber goal. Positioning is probably the gap to close next.

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