@VideXpertYT Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Analyzed
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@VideXpertYT (17,200 subs) sits in a 15-30K subscriber band alongside @GMODFUNNYSHORTS (20.9K), @Autolykus (21.8K), @Sideye-24 (19.5K), @MachoRushDrama (30.6K), and @SchoolDayzGamerz-yn5pt (12.3K). The key differentiator: VideXpertYT is the only one teaching YouTube growth and editing — the rest are pure gaming or drama uploaders.
Channel data · captured Jun 18, 2026
- Handle
- @VideXpertYT
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
Worth saying upfront: this comparison set is matched by subscriber tier, not topic. @VideXpertYT runs a YouTube education channel from India — 44 uploads, 17.2K subs, teaching editing tricks and growth tactics. The other five are content creators in gaming, shorts, and short-form drama. So the real question this page can answer is less 'who's the better tutorial channel' and more 'what does the 15-30K subscriber neighborhood look like, and what's @VideXpertYT being benchmarked against.' Honestly, that's the more useful read anyway.
@GMODFUNNYSHORTS (20.9K subs, US) is a gaming shorts machine — 741 videos against @VideXpertYT's 44. That's roughly a 17x output gap, which tells you everything about their strategy. Shorts-volume channels grow on algorithmic lottery tickets: more shots, more chances. @VideXpertYT can't and shouldn't copy this — their value-per-video is high because each upload is a tutorial someone actively searches for. Worth watching @GMODFUNNYSHORTS if you want to study volume-based shorts publishing, not if you're trying to replicate their funnel. Different math entirely.
@Sideye-24 (19.5K subs, country unknown) is the strangest data point in this set. 31 videos to 19.5K subs is an unusually efficient ratio — better subs-per-video than anyone else here, including @VideXpertYT (44 videos to 17.2K). The description literally just thanks viewers for hitting 18K and aims for 20K, so I can't see the content strategy from outside. But the math suggests either a small handful of viral hits or a tight niche audience that converts hard. If you're trying to understand low-volume, high-conversion patterns, @Sideye-24 is the more interesting study than the volume channels.
@Autolykus (21.8K subs, US) is a League of Legends streamer — NA Challenger since Season 6, Rank 1 in Season 9, 783 videos focused on a Sett/Mordekaiser/Darius pool. This is a personality-driven channel, not a tutorial one. Topical overlap with @VideXpertYT is basically zero, but there's one useful angle: @Autolykus monetizes on viewer parasocial trust ('this is a Challenger player teaching you his pool') in a way @VideXpertYT could borrow. The 'BE THE XPERT' tagline is gesturing at the same thing — credibility-as-product. Different niche, similar lever.
@SchoolDayzGamerz-yn5pt (12.3K subs, India) is the closest geographic peer — also Indian creator, also gaming, but a 987-video catalog producing only 12.3K subs is the inverse of @Sideye-24. Lots of work, modest conversion. The channel description ('I always miss my school days') is unfiltered and earnest, which probably helps retention but caps the addressable audience. @VideXpertYT can ignore this one strategically, but it's a real-world example of why volume alone doesn't unlock the next subscriber tier — useful context for anyone teaching YouTube growth.
@MachoRushDrama (30.6K subs, Taiwan) is the biggest channel in the set and a different animal entirely — Chinese-language short-form drama compilations, 67 videos producing 30.6K subs. That's a 457 subs-per-video ratio, the healthiest in the set. The format (uploading short drama clips daily) rides a content trend that's been quietly dominating Asian YouTube for the last 18 months. Nothing here overlaps with @VideXpertYT's tutorial niche, but if you're tracking format trends across Asian markets, this channel is a real signal worth bookmarking.
If you actually watch @VideXpertYT, the channels worth pairing with them aren't in this size-matched list — they'd be other YouTube education creators in the VidIQ or Think Media tier. What this set does give you is a snapshot of the 15-30K subscriber neighborhood: high-output gaming shorts (@GMODFUNNYSHORTS, @Autolykus), efficient low-volume channels (@Sideye-24, @MachoRushDrama), and grinder channels (@SchoolDayzGamerz). @VideXpertYT's real challenge from here is whether their tutorial format can hit 30K without dramatically increasing upload cadence — most education channels need a bigger video library to compound search traffic, and 44 videos is on the lean side.
Common questions
Who are @VideXpertYT's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Honestly, this is a size-matched comparison rather than a niche one. @MachoRushDrama is the largest channel in the set at 30.6K subs, followed by @Autolykus (21.8K), @GMODFUNNYSHORTS (20.9K), @Sideye-24 (19.5K), and @SchoolDayzGamerz-yn5pt (12.3K). None are direct topical competitors though — @VideXpertYT teaches YouTube growth and editing while the others are gaming, drama, or shorts channels. The actual competitive set would be other YouTube education creators in the same subscriber tier, which doesn't surface in this lookalike pool.
How does @VideXpertYT compare to @GMODFUNNYSHORTS?
@GMODFUNNYSHORTS has 741 videos to @VideXpertYT's 44 — roughly a 17x output difference. They're a volume-based Garry's Mod shorts channel from the US, riding the algorithm with high-frequency uploads. @VideXpertYT is the opposite model: low volume, high information-density per video. They're slightly smaller (17.2K vs 20.9K subs) but their value-per-video is dramatically higher because each upload is a searchable tutorial. Worth watching @GMODFUNNYSHORTS to understand shorts-driven growth, not as a template @VideXpertYT could ever copy.
What channels should I watch alongside @VideXpertYT?
From this set, @Autolykus (21.8K) for personality-driven credibility positioning — same 'I'm an expert teaching you' angle @VideXpertYT uses. @Sideye-24 (19.5K) is worth studying for the unusually efficient sub-to-video ratio (19.5K subs from just 31 videos). But if you watch @VideXpertYT for actual YouTube growth tactics, the better pairings would be channels like VidIQ, Think Media, or Roberto Blake — none of which appear in this auto-generated competitor set, which is matched on subscriber tier rather than topic. Different question, different answer.
Is @VideXpertYT the biggest channel in their niche?
No, and the data here is misleading because this competitor set isn't actually their niche. @VideXpertYT (17,200 subs) operates in the YouTube growth and education space, where channels routinely run into the millions of subscribers. Within this size-matched comparison group, they sit fourth out of six by subscriber count — @MachoRushDrama leads at 30.6K, @Autolykus has 21.8K, @GMODFUNNYSHORTS has 20.9K. But that's a ranking across totally different niches, so it doesn't really mean anything competitively. Apples and pomegranates.
What's the difference between @VideXpertYT and similar creators?
The biggest difference is content type. @VideXpertYT is a tutorial channel with 44 videos teaching specific YouTube growth and editing skills. The 'similar' channels here are content creators: @GMODFUNNYSHORTS does Garry's Mod shorts, @Autolykus does League of Legends gameplay, @MachoRushDrama uploads Asian short-form dramas. The economics differ too — tutorial channels compound through search traffic and need bigger libraries, while content channels lean on upload frequency. Different monetization paths, different audience behavior, different growth curves. The only real shared trait is the subscriber count bracket.
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