@codingoblin Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared (2026)
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@codingoblin (2,380 subs) sits in a sub-3K bracket alongside @ZyfernoFN (3,620), @HeyMythX (3,150), and @Priceactionlivee (2,820). The clearest topical peer is @Priceactionlivee — both teach money-adjacent skills openly — while the others share sub-count proximity but not niche, audience, or upload strategy.
Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026
- Handle
- @codingoblin
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
The build-in-public online business niche @codingoblin sits in — UK-based, 128 videos in, transparent about wins and flops — is small enough at the sub-3K tier that scrapers struggle to find clean topical peers. The set returned here clusters more by subscriber count (1,260–3,620) than by content overlap. That's worth flagging up front: only one of the five channels below is genuinely in the same lane. The others are gaming creators, a Hindi entertainment channel, and a forex educator who happen to share a similar audience size. Useful as a map of who occupies neighboring real estate, less useful as a head-to-head watch list.
@ZyfernoFN leads the set at 3,620 subs across just 44 videos — about 82 subs per upload, by far the highest efficiency ratio here. The 'FN' suffix and the low-volume/high-sub-count shape strongly suggest Fortnite shorts, where one clip can pull tens of thousands of views in a week. Country wasn't returned on the scrape, which is itself a tell — gaming clip channels often skip the geo field. Compared to @codingoblin's 128 videos over what's likely a longer build window, ZyfernoFN is playing a different game entirely: short-form viral attempts versus long-form business storytelling. Subscribe-worthy if you want gaming shorts, not if you want business content.
@HeyMythX, 3,150 subs and 76 videos, country India. The description didn't come through cleanly in the scrape ('More about this channel'), so the topic isn't observable from this data alone — that's a real gap worth admitting. By raw shape, HeyMythX is roughly 41 subs per video, sitting between ZyfernoFN's efficiency and codingoblin's ~19 subs/video. India geo plus mid-sub bracket usually points to tech, finance, or self-improvement explainers, but I can't confirm without checking the channel directly. If HeyMythX is in the business/tech lane, they're the second potential topical peer to codingoblin in this set. Worth a click to verify.
@Priceactionlivee, 2,820 subs, 545 videos, India — the only channel in this set with clear topical overlap. They teach forex trading with the 'we're not financial advisors, learn alongside us' framing, which mirrors codingoblin's 'follow along for the wins, the flops, and the real numbers' positioning closely. The big difference is cadence: 545 videos at 2,820 subs is a much higher-volume, lower-sub-per-video model (about 5 subs per upload) versus codingoblin's tighter library. If codingoblin is building one business in public, Priceactionlivee is teaching a single skill repeatedly. Watch them for upload-frequency ideas and how they handle the disclaimer/transparency framing on monetary content.
@Anjana.ar. at 2,680 subs but 2,300 videos is the volume outlier of the set — roughly 1.2 subs gained per upload, which is the inverse of what high-yield channels look like. The description is Hindi-language and lists acting, dance, folk songs, kajri, sawan, and bhakti content. Zero overlap with codingoblin's business focus. It's here because the scraper matched on subscriber count and nothing else. Useful as a data point on how sub-count alone is a terrible similarity signal — two channels can sit within 300 subs of each other and live in completely different content economies, language markets, and viewer intents.
@SmylesFN, 1,260 subs, 534 videos, United States — the smallest channel in the set and another Fortnite creator. Bio mentions hard-of-hearing and a heart condition, short edits, and Fortnite gameplay. The volume-to-sub ratio (about 2.4 subs per video) tells you this is a grind-it-out shorts channel rather than a steady-growth long-form one. Different content economy from codingoblin entirely: shorts-driven gaming needs constant clips and rides algorithm spikes, whereas codingoblin's 128-video catalog with a transparent-revenue angle suggests longer-form storytelling. Interesting comparison point if you're curious how shorts-volume strategies plateau in the 1–2K range, but not a topical peer in any meaningful sense.
If you watch @codingoblin, the only genuine adjacent watch from this list is @Priceactionlivee — same money-adjacent education lane, same 'no financial advice' framing, just trading instead of business-building. @HeyMythX is a maybe pending a topic check. The other three are noise the scraper pulled in on subscriber proximity. A cleaner peer set for codingoblin probably lives outside this list: think UK-based indie hackers, build-in-public Twitter-to-YouTube crossover creators, or anyone publishing monthly revenue breakdowns. Worth a manual hunt if you're scouting the full competitive map.
Common questions
Who are @codingoblin's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Within the pulled competitor set, the three largest are @ZyfernoFN (3,620 subs), @HeyMythX (3,150 subs), and @Priceactionlivee (2,820 subs) — all sitting above @codingoblin's 2,380. But 'biggest competitor' depends on how you define it. By raw subscriber size, ZyfernoFN leads. By actual topical overlap with codingoblin's build-in-public business niche, only Priceactionlivee qualifies, and even they're in adjacent (forex education) rather than identical territory. The real competitor map for codingoblin probably extends beyond this scraped set into UK indie-hacker and revenue-transparency creators not represented here.
How does @codingoblin compare to @HeyMythX?
@HeyMythX is roughly 770 subs ahead of @codingoblin (3,150 vs 2,380) with about 41% fewer videos (76 vs 128). HeyMythX is based in India; codingoblin is in the UK. The honest answer is that HeyMythX's topic isn't fully visible from the scrape — their description came back as 'More about this channel' with no detail — so I can't confirm whether they're a true topical peer. By shape alone (mid-sub bracket, moderate video output), they look comparable, but content positioning needs a direct visit to confirm.
What channels should I watch alongside @codingoblin?
From this five-channel set, the only realistic also-watch is @Priceactionlivee — they share the educational, money-adjacent, 'learn alongside us' framing that defines codingoblin's positioning, just applied to forex trading instead of business-building. @HeyMythX is a tentative second pick pending topic verification. The other three (@ZyfernoFN and @SmylesFN are Fortnite gaming, @Anjana.ar. is Hindi entertainment) are subscriber-count neighbors with zero content overlap. If you want a broader watch list, look outside this set toward UK build-in-public creators and revenue-transparency channels — that's codingoblin's actual peer group.
Is @codingoblin the biggest channel in their niche?
Not in this set — @codingoblin's 2,380 subs sits below three of the five comparison channels. But none of those three are really in codingoblin's niche of build-in-public online business content, so the question is a bit malformed. The actual build-in-public/indie-hacker YouTube niche has creators well above codingoblin's size (think mid-five-figure to six-figure subs in the UK and US scene). At 2,380 subs with 128 videos, codingoblin is still in the small-channel building phase — the 'follow along for the wins and flops' framing is exactly right for that stage.
What's the difference between @codingoblin and similar creators?
The clearest differentiator is @codingoblin's combination of UK base, build-in-public online business focus, and explicit transparency about wins and flops with real numbers. None of the five scraped competitors share all three. @ZyfernoFN and @SmylesFN are Fortnite gaming channels playing a shorts-volume game. @Anjana.ar. is a high-volume Hindi entertainment channel (2,300 videos, completely different content economy). @Priceactionlivee teaches forex with a similar educational framing but a different skill domain. @HeyMythX is unclear from the data. Codingoblin's specific niche — transparent UK indie business-building — looks underserved at the sub-3K level, which is either an opportunity or a sign of small total audience.
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