@dancecreator1.0 Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared
@dancecreator1.0 (44,600 subs, 756 videos) sits closest to @VerdashGamingYT (44,600 subs, 891 videos) and @kallawaytech (47,800 subs, 220 videos) by sub count. The key observable difference: dancecreator1.0 posts daily shorts in Hindi from India, while most peers in this set publish far less frequently in English.
Channel data · captured May 18, 2026
- Handle
- @dancecreator1.0
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
Looking at the scraped competitor set, the first thing worth flagging is that these aren't all direct niche matches. @dancecreator1.0 is a daily-shorts channel out of Mukundpur, India, posting in Hindi (the description literally says 'Daily short video upload karta hu'). The peer set the algorithm grouped them with is a mix — tech, gaming, lifestyle, gaming again — which honestly tells you something about how YouTube clusters mid-size Indian shorts channels. The connecting thread isn't topic, it's the 20K–50K sub band and the shorts-heavy publishing rhythm. So treat this comparison less as 'rivals in the same niche' and more as 'channels operating at a similar scale that a viewer of dancecreator1.0 might also stumble into.'
@VerdashGamingYT (44,600 subs, 891 videos, India) is the closest structural twin in this set. Same sub count to the digit, similar video count (891 vs 756), same country, same volume-heavy approach. The difference is content angle — Verdash is a gaming channel ('funny gaming channel,' lots of Let's Plays) while dancecreator1.0 is presumably dance/entertainment shorts. If you're benchmarking how a daily-upload Indian shorts channel performs at this scale, Verdash is the cleanest comparable. Follow them if you want to see how someone with a nearly identical publishing footprint approaches a different vertical.
@mmff (23,300 subs, 1,400 videos, Thailand) is the most interesting outlier here. They have nearly twice the video count of dancecreator1.0 but only half the subscriber base. That's a 60 subs-per-video ratio versus dancecreator1.0's ~59 — almost identical efficiency, which is weirdly satisfying. mmff is a FreeFire mobile gaming channel doing handcam content. The takeaway for a creator: if you're posting daily and stuck around the 20–50K range, this is the converted-rate you might expect from raw output alone. Follow mmff if you want to study what 1,400 short uploads looks like over time.
@kallawaytech (47,800 subs, 220 videos, United States) is the opposite end of the spectrum and probably the most useful contrast. Tech and AI commentary, only 220 videos total, more subs than dancecreator1.0. That works out to roughly 217 subs per video — almost 4x dancecreator1.0's ratio. Different game entirely: longer-form, lower-frequency, higher-leverage. There's nothing wrong with the daily-shorts approach, but kallawaytech is what 'fewer, higher-quality' looks like at the same audience tier. Worth watching if you're considering whether to slow your cadence.
@Decode_withmee (38,400 subs, 128 videos, India) is in the same country as dancecreator1.0 but plays a completely different game — coding/AI tutorials, only 128 uploads, 300 subs per video. Another data point for the 'less volume, more retention' hypothesis. The audience overlap with dancecreator1.0 is probably near zero, but as a peer for studying Indian creators who've built mid-size followings on focused tech content rather than daily output, they're useful. Follow them if you're curious about what a tighter content focus looks like in the Indian market.
@iamanikarani (24,000 subs, 328 videos, Australia) is the furthest from dancecreator1.0 in basically every dimension — different country, different language, different topic (lifestyle/career/creativity), smaller audience, mid-tier output. Honestly, the only real reason they're grouped here is probably surface-level signal noise in the recommendation graph. Not a competitor in any meaningful sense. Watch them if you're personally interested in long-form reflective content, but don't benchmark against them.
If you watch @dancecreator1.0, the most natural companions in this set are @VerdashGamingYT (same scale, same country, daily shorts model) and @mmff (different country but same high-volume shorts playbook). @kallawaytech and @Decode_withmee are more interesting as contrasts — they show what the same sub tier looks like with one-third the upload count. The honest read on this competitor set: dancecreator1.0's real rivals are almost certainly other Hindi-language dance/entertainment shorts channels not represented here, but the cross-niche peers above are a fair proxy for what 44K subs and a daily cadence buys you in 2026.
Common questions
Who are @dancecreator1.0's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Based on the scraped peer set, the closest competitor by raw numbers is @VerdashGamingYT — same 44,600 subscriber count, similar video volume (891 vs 756), same country (India). After that, @kallawaytech (47,800 subs) and @Decode_withmee (38,400 subs) are in the same sub-tier but very different content models. The honest caveat: these aren't direct niche rivals. Dancecreator1.0's true competitors are almost certainly other Hindi-language daily-shorts channels in the dance/entertainment space that didn't surface in this particular scrape.
How does @dancecreator1.0 compare to @iamanikarani?
Not really comparable, honestly. @iamanikarani (24,000 subs, 328 videos, Australia) is a lifestyle and career-reflection channel posting in English. @dancecreator1.0 has nearly twice the subs (44,600), more than twice the video output (756), and operates out of India with daily Hindi-language shorts. Different country, different language, different format, different audience. The only thing they share is being in the mid-tier 20K–50K subscriber range. If you're a creator studying what works at scale, these two are useful as opposite ends of the publishing-frequency spectrum and not much else.
What channels should I watch alongside @dancecreator1.0?
If you like the daily-shorts rhythm, @VerdashGamingYT is the most natural pairing — same country, same upload cadence, just different vertical (gaming instead of dance). @mmff out of Thailand is another high-volume shorts channel worth checking if you're interested in how 1,400 uploads stack over time. If you want a contrast — same audience size but very different approach — @kallawaytech does tech/AI commentary in only 220 total videos, which is a useful counter-example to the daily-upload model dancecreator1.0 runs on.
Is @dancecreator1.0 the biggest channel in their niche?
Hard to say definitively from this competitor set alone, since most of the listed peers aren't in the dance/entertainment shorts niche. Within this specific group, @kallawaytech (47,800) edges them out slightly on subscriber count, and @VerdashGamingYT is tied at exactly 44,600. But in their actual niche — Hindi-language daily dance shorts from India — there are likely much larger channels not represented here. 44,600 subs is solidly mid-tier; not a small creator, but nowhere near the top of the Indian shorts ecosystem.
What's the difference between @dancecreator1.0 and similar creators?
The biggest observable difference is publishing cadence. @dancecreator1.0 has 756 videos against 44,600 subs — roughly 59 subs per video. Compare that to @kallawaytech at 217 subs per video or @Decode_withmee at 300 subs per video. Dancecreator1.0 is clearly playing the volume game, posting daily shorts and accumulating subs through frequency rather than per-video reach. The peers with higher subs-per-video ratios are running a different playbook: fewer, more focused uploads with stronger individual performance. Neither is wrong — they're just different bets.
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