VeraFN Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels & How They Compare
@VeraFN (4,310 subs, 28 videos) shares the YouTube small-channel bracket with @GreatsageGamer (5,480 subs) and @trilloskywalker (5,340 subs). The clearest differentiator is output volume: VeraFN has 28 lifetime uploads, while trilloskywalker has 707 and InvestwithDeclan has 453. That's not a niche overlap so much as a publishing strategy gap.
Channel data · captured May 16, 2026
- Handle
- @VeraFN
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
The handle 'VeraFN' almost certainly signals Fortnite content, and the channel description ('¡¡SUBSCRIBE FOR GOOD LUCK 🍀777!!') reads like a young gaming creator's calling card — short, playful, not trying to be a brand yet. The competitor set YouTube's algorithm groups around them, though, is interesting. Out of five 'similar' channels, only one (@GreatsageGamer) is actually a gamer. The rest land in this set by subscriber size and engagement velocity more than topical overlap. Worth being upfront about that — if you're scouting actual Fortnite competitors, this list is partial. The structural comparisons are still useful though, especially around upload behavior.
@GreatsageGamer (5,480 subs, 84 videos) is the closest topical match here, though they're a Black Myth: Wukong specialist running 4K PS5 gameplay loops, not battle royale content. Their video-to-sub ratio is ~65:1 — meaning each video has on average pulled fewer subs than VeraFN's ~154:1. That's actually a point in VeraFN's favor: their 28 videos are converting better per upload. If you're a Fortnite viewer looking for atmospheric AAA gameplay between matches, GreatsageGamer is a reasonable parallel watch. If you want PvP highlight content or build-battles, they're not the right channel.
@trilloskywalker (5,340 subs, 707 videos) is the cautionary tale of the set. The description reads like a singer-songwriter pouring out personal narrative — 'My Music Is My Biography' — and 707 uploads have netted roughly 7.5 subs per video. Different niche entirely from VeraFN, so not a competitive comparison, but it's a useful data point sitting in the same sub bracket. High-volume publishing without distribution mechanics behind it doesn't compound. Follow trilloskywalker if you're interested in indie self-released music storytelling; it has nothing to do with what VeraFN's gaming audience showed up for.
@MissionAdda4 (6,310 subs, 251 videos) is the second-largest channel in this competitor set, but it's an India-based Hindi-language government exam prep channel — SSC, UPSC, that lane. Zero audience overlap with a US-based Fortnite creator. The reason it shows up here, I'd guess, is similar engagement velocity at this subscriber tier. The algorithm clusters partly by behavioral patterns, not just topic. If you're a Hindi-speaking exam aspirant this is genuinely a strong channel at this size. For VeraFN's actual viewers, it's noise — useful only as a reminder that 'similar channels' is doing a lot of work.
@monuinstitute (7,940 subs, 120 videos) is another India-based educational channel — Hindi-language computer course tutorials covering O Level, CCC, PGDCA. They have the highest sub count in this entire group and one of the most efficient ratios (~66 subs per video). No real overlap with VeraFN's audience. The pattern worth noting though: educational channels at this tier tend to outpace entertainment channels on sub-per-video because the search intent is durable. Tutorial views compound over years. Gaming clips age out in weeks unless the meta keeps them relevant.
@InvestwithDeclan (2,370 subs, 453 videos) is an Ireland-based stock and crypto commentary channel. Smallest in the competitor set, second-highest video count after trilloskywalker. The description ('calm, level-headed analysis') signals a deliberate positioning play that's working against him at this scale — finance commentary is brutal until you cross a threshold where people trust the take. Zero overlap with VeraFN audience-wise, included here mostly to round out the comparison. The lesson is similar to trilloskywalker: high upload count alone hasn't translated to compounding growth.
If you watch @VeraFN, the only channel from this set worth queueing up alongside is probably @GreatsageGamer — different game, same general energy of small-channel gameplay-first content. The bigger takeaway from running this comparison is that VeraFN's 28 videos sitting at 4,310 subs is a healthier per-upload performance than four of the five 'competitors' YouTube is grouping them with. Actual competitor scouting for this channel would mean searching Fortnite creators in the 1K–10K range specifically — Zero Build players, edit course runners, build-battle specialists. This auto-generated set doesn't surface them, so treat it as a starting reference, not a complete map.
Common questions
Who are @VeraFN's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Honestly, this is where it gets messy. YouTube's algorithm groups @VeraFN with five channels in the 2K-8K sub range, but only @GreatsageGamer (5,480 subs) is actually a gaming creator. The rest are Hindi-language educational channels (@MissionAdda4 at 6,310, @monuinstitute at 7,940), a finance commentator (@InvestwithDeclan at 2,370), and a singer-songwriter (@trilloskywalker at 5,340). For real Fortnite competitor scouting you'd want to search the Fortnite tag directly in the 1K–10K subscriber range. The algorithmic neighbors here are similarity-by-size and engagement velocity, not similarity-by-audience.
How does @VeraFN compare to @trilloskywalker?
They don't really compare — different content, different audiences. The interesting data point is the math: @trilloskywalker has uploaded 707 videos to reach 5,340 subs, which is roughly 7.5 subs per upload. @VeraFN has 28 videos and 4,310 subs, which works out to about 154 subs per upload. So per piece of content, VeraFN is converting roughly 20x better. That doesn't mean they're a bigger channel — it means their early content is finding people. trilloskywalker's high-volume approach hasn't compounded the way you'd hope after 700+ uploads.
What channels should I watch alongside @VeraFN?
From this algorithmic competitor set, @GreatsageGamer (5,480 subs) is the only one that makes sense — they run Black Myth: Wukong 4K gameplay on PS5. Different game, similar small-channel gameplay-focused energy. Outside this auto-generated list you'd find better adjacents in the broader small-creator Fortnite ecosystem: highlight editors, Zero Build players, build-battle specialists, edit course runners. The five channels listed here mostly share subscriber size with VeraFN, not topical overlap, so 'watch alongside' applies cleanly to just GreatsageGamer if you want anything content-relevant.
Is @VeraFN the biggest channel in their niche?
No, and not even close to the top of this comparison set. At 4,310 subs, @VeraFN ranks fourth out of the six channels in the algorithmic cluster — @monuinstitute (7,940), @MissionAdda4 (6,310), @GreatsageGamer (5,480), and @trilloskywalker (5,340) all sit above. Only @InvestwithDeclan (2,370) is smaller. In the actual Fortnite niche, 4K subs places VeraFN solidly in the small-creator tier — well below the established names but past the bottom rung where the first thousand is the hardest grind.
What's the difference between @VeraFN and similar creators?
The single most observable difference is output volume. @VeraFN has 28 lifetime videos. The comparison set averages 323 videos per channel — more than ten times the upload count. The other channels are also mostly more established in their respective niches (Hindi tutorials, indie music, finance commentary, AAA gaming). VeraFN is small, US-based, and from the handle almost certainly Fortnite-focused, which puts them in a fast-moving entertainment lane where 28 videos can mean either 'just getting started' or 'pruned highlights only.' Hard to tell without seeing the upload date pattern, but the per-video conversion is unusually strong.
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