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Competitor comparison · @VILLAIN_BGMI_

@VILLAIN_BGMI_ Competitors: 5 Similar Gaming Channels Compared (2026)

@VILLAIN_BGMI_ (18,800 subs, 428 videos) competes most directly with @LostSavePoint9 (17,400 subs) and @DeadlyDanger07 (15,100 subs, 1,100 videos). The key differentiator: VILLAIN sits squarely in BGMI/PUBG Mobile gameplay, while the comp set sprawls across shooters, easter eggs, and FPS weapon showcases.

Channel data · captured May 21, 2026

Handle
@VILLAIN_BGMI_
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

The overlap here is messier than it looks at first glance. @VILLAIN_BGMI_'s description couldn't be more direct — it's a BGMI and PUBG Mobile channel, full stop. But the channels YouTube and most competitor scrapers cluster around it aren't pure BGMI creators. They're adjacent: mobile shooter creators, FPS weapon-showcase channels, easter-egg hunters, and one creator who literally builds his own battle royale game. So the "competitive set" is really a Venn diagram of mobile-FPS-India-gaming, and VILLAIN sits in the densest part of it.

@DeadlyDanger07 (15,100 subs, 1,100 videos, India) is the closest peer on paper and the most interesting one to study. The bio calls him the "official creator of scarfall 2.0" — Scarfall is an India-made mobile battle royale, basically a domestic PUBG alternative. So he's playing in the same sandbox as VILLAIN but one rung sideways: not BGMI itself, but a BGMI-substitute. His video count is wild — 1,100 uploads to VILLAIN's 428, almost 3x. That cadence tells you he's grinding daily shorts or quick gameplay clips, while VILLAIN at 428/4-ish-years is probably closer to 2 uploads a week. Follow Danger if you want the higher-frequency, lower-production-floor version of this niche.

@gwynblade3378 (13,700 subs, 366 videos, India) is harder to pin down — the bio is a generic "ultimate destination for gaming" pitch with no specific game named. 366 videos over time suggests a roughly similar pace to VILLAIN, but without a tight niche claim. Honestly, this one feels like a discovery-algorithm neighbor more than a true content competitor. If a viewer of VILLAIN clicks into gwynblade looking for more BGMI, they may or may not find it depending on what week they show up. Follow them if you want broader India gaming variety; skip them if you want pure BGMI.

@tedskii (15,100 subs, 37 videos, United States) is the outlier that proves the algorithm is reaching. 15K subs on only 37 videos is an absurd ratio — roughly 408 subs per video, which is 10x what VILLAIN does per upload (~44 subs/video). Something hit for them. Either one video went viral and pulled the whole channel up, or they're running a very tight, high-effort release schedule. The bio is just a business inquiries email, which doesn't help. For a BGMI viewer this is probably the least relevant channel in the set, but it's worth a look as a case study in subs-per-video efficiency.

@LostSavePoint9 (17,400 subs, 315 videos, US) is the second-closest peer by subscriber count and the most clearly defined competitor in the set. Their bio is specific: "gaming secrets, hidden locations, developer details, and Easter eggs." That's a different content angle than VILLAIN entirely — it's lore/discovery content, not competitive gameplay. But the sub count and pacing (315 videos to VILLAIN's 428) put them in the same tier algorithmically. Worth watching if VILLAIN's audience also enjoys deep-dive game content; not a direct substitute though.

@exilas8699 (10,000 subs, 2,000 videos, country unlisted) is the volume play in this group. 2,000 videos is, frankly, staggering — almost 5x VILLAIN's library. The bio focuses on "weapon showcases and reload animations across Call of Duty and other top-tier FPS games." So it's FPS-adjacent but PC/console-leaning, not mobile. The interesting tell is the subs-to-videos ratio: 10K subs across 2,000 uploads is just 5 subs per video. That's a high-volume, low-conversion-per-video pattern — probably lots of short clips. VILLAIN's 44 subs/video is significantly more efficient.

If you watch @VILLAIN_BGMI_, the channel most likely to give you a similar experience is @DeadlyDanger07 — same region, adjacent game, India mobile-shooter creator energy. @LostSavePoint9 is the bigger sub count peer but different content angle. The other three are looser fits: gwynblade is a discovery neighbor, tedskii is a curiosity, exilas is a volume creator in a different game family entirely. For pure BGMI gameplay, this set is honestly thinner than you'd expect — which itself is interesting and probably a small opening for VILLAIN to own that specific lane.

Common questions

Who are @VILLAIN_BGMI_'s biggest competitors on YouTube?

Based on the live data, the closest peers by subscriber count are @LostSavePoint9 (17,400 subs) and @DeadlyDanger07 (15,100 subs). DeadlyDanger07 is the strongest direct competitor — same India region, same mobile battle royale niche (Scarfall 2.0 instead of BGMI). LostSavePoint9 is bigger but covers gaming easter eggs and developer secrets, a different angle. Beyond those two, @tedskii, @gwynblade3378, and @exilas8699 round out the algorithmically-adjacent set but with looser content fit. VILLAIN_BGMI_ at 18,800 subs is actually the largest channel in this specific competitor group.

How does @VILLAIN_BGMI_ compare to @DeadlyDanger07?

Both are India-based mobile shooter channels, but the cadence is wildly different. DeadlyDanger07 has 1,100 videos to VILLAIN's 428 — roughly 2.5x the upload volume — yet has fewer subscribers (15,100 vs 18,800). That gap matters: VILLAIN gets about 44 subs per video uploaded, while DeadlyDanger07 gets about 14. So VILLAIN's content is converting better per upload, even at lower frequency. DeadlyDanger07 also leans into Scarfall 2.0 (an Indian BR alternative), while VILLAIN stays inside BGMI and PUBG Mobile proper.

What channels should I watch alongside @VILLAIN_BGMI_?

If you're into BGMI gameplay specifically, @DeadlyDanger07 is the closest substitute — same region, adjacent game, much higher upload frequency. For broader gaming content with a similar production scale, @LostSavePoint9 (17,400 subs) is worth following, though their focus is on easter eggs and hidden game details rather than competitive matches. @gwynblade3378 is a fellow India gaming creator at 13,700 subs but with less specific niche framing. The set is small enough that you can comfortably follow all of them without much overlap in actual content.

Is @VILLAIN_BGMI_ the biggest channel in their niche?

Within this specific scraped competitor set — yes. At 18,800 subscribers, VILLAIN_BGMI_ is the largest channel, beating @LostSavePoint9 (17,400), @DeadlyDanger07 and @tedskii (both 15,100), @gwynblade3378 (13,700), and @exilas8699 (10,000). That said, this is a narrow sample of algorithmically-similar creators, not the whole BGMI YouTube landscape. There are much larger BGMI channels in India with hundreds of thousands or millions of subs. Within this peer cluster though, VILLAIN sits at the top by sub count.

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

The clearest difference is niche tightness. VILLAIN's description names exactly two games: BGMI and PUBG Mobile. The competitor set is much broader — @LostSavePoint9 does easter eggs across games, @exilas8699 covers FPS weapon showcases on Call of Duty and other shooters, @gwynblade3378 has no specific game named at all. Only @DeadlyDanger07 holds a comparably narrow niche, and his is a different game (Scarfall 2.0). VILLAIN's 44-subs-per-video efficiency also outpaces most of this set, which suggests the focused niche is converting better than the broader-content competitors.

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