@dgikaos Competitors: 3 Similar YouTube Channels Compared (2026)
@dgikaos (12,600 subs, 152 videos) competes most directly with @imsayanroy (23,100 subs) and @Sandhya-cg1nq (11,500 subs). The key differentiator is positioning: @dgikaos targets US creators with AI video tooling, while the closest comparable channels are India-based and lean heavier on affiliate reviews or sheer volume.
Channel data · captured May 13, 2026
- Handle
- @dgikaos
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
The overlap here is messier than it looks on paper. @dgikaos describes itself as "Digital Support for Creators, AI Video Creation and More" — a pretty specific lane (creator tools + AI workflows) aimed at a US audience. The competitor set the algorithm groups them with is mostly India-based and skews toward software reviews, gaming, or general digital content. That mismatch matters: subscriber counts in this range can look similar on a spreadsheet but the audiences barely touch.
Honestly, looking at the 152-video library against the 12.6K sub count, @dgikaos is averaging roughly 83 subs per video lifetime, which is a respectable conversion rate for a tools/AI channel where most viewers are problem-solving rather than entertainment-watching. That ratio is the lens I'd use to compare the rest of this set, because raw subs hide a lot.
@imsayanroy (23,100 subs, 228 videos) is the closest functional competitor — not because the content matches exactly, but because the *intent* does. Sayan reviews software and runs NKRACADEMY DIGITAL SOLUTIONS alongside a partner, which means he's pulling the same affiliate-curious viewers who'd land on a "best AI video tool" search. He's nearly 2x @dgikaos's sub count with only 50% more videos, which suggests his per-video pull is stronger — likely because review videos have predictable search demand. Follow him if you want to study how a software-review creator builds an audience-funnel into a real business. Skip him if you want creator-workflow content rather than affiliate breakdowns.
@PixelSTEVE07 (8,109 subs, 340 videos) is the weakest overlap in this set, and worth being honest about that. He's a gaming channel out of India — the description literally says "Leveling up life one game at a time." The only reason he probably shows up as a comp is shared keywords around "digital" and gaming-adjacent AI tooling. His 340 videos against 8.1K subs works out to ~24 subs per video, which tells you he's grinding volume in a brutally crowded niche. A @dgikaos viewer probably isn't watching him. Worth following only if you're studying high-frequency upload strategy in saturated verticals — there's a real lesson in his cadence even if the topic is wrong.
@Sandhya-cg1nq (11,500 subs, 3,100 videos) is the wild card. 3,100 videos is not a typo — that's roughly 20x @dgikaos's library against a similar sub count. The Hindi description ("प्लीज दोस्तों इस चैनल को ज्यादा से ज्यादा सपोर्ट करीये") roughly translates to a request for community support, which combined with the absurd upload count suggests this is a daily-vlog-style or aggregated-content channel rather than a curated creator-tools play. Per-video efficiency is ~3.7 subs, which is the inverse of what @dgikaos is doing. Different game entirely. The only real takeaway from comparing them: @dgikaos is winning on per-video value, Sandhya is winning on shelf-space.
If I had to pick the actual gap in this competitor set — there isn't a clean US-based AI-for-creators peer in the scrape. That's either a data limitation or, more interestingly, a signal that @dgikaos's specific lane (US audience, AI video tools, creator support) is under-served by direct rivals. Could be a positioning advantage worth leaning into, or it could mean the audience is going to bigger established channels (think Matt Wolfe, Futurepedia-adjacent creators) that the comp scraper didn't surface because the sub gap is too wide to count as "similar."
If you watch @dgikaos, the realistic companion follow is @imsayanroy for the software-review angle — that's where the genuine audience overlap exists. @PixelSTEVE07 and @Sandhya-cg1nq are interesting data points but not really substitutes; they're algorithmic neighbors more than content peers. For a @dgikaos viewer looking to round out their feed, I'd actually look outside this set toward English-language AI-tool reviewers in the 50K-200K range — that's where the next tier of competition (and learning) actually lives.
Common questions
Who are @dgikaos's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Based on the scraped competitor set, the closest is @imsayanroy at 23,100 subs — a software reviewer with real audience-intent overlap. After that the picks get loose: @Sandhya-cg1nq (11,500 subs) and @PixelSTEVE07 (8,109 subs) are algorithmic neighbors but don't really share the AI-for-creators lane @dgikaos sits in. The honest answer is @dgikaos's most direct US-based AI-tool competitors probably aren't in this 8K-23K bracket — they're either much smaller (and didn't surface in the scrape) or much larger like Futurepedia-style channels.
How does @dgikaos compare to @PixelSTEVE07?
They're not really comparable on content — @PixelSTEVE07 is an India-based gaming channel (8,109 subs, 340 videos), while @dgikaos focuses on AI video creation and creator support for a US audience. The overlap is mostly keyword-driven ("digital," "gaming AI") rather than audience-driven. Where the comparison gets interesting is upload strategy: PixelSTEVE07 averages ~24 subs per video lifetime versus @dgikaos's ~83, which tells you that a curated tools-and-tutorials approach converts better per-video than high-frequency gaming content in saturated niches. Different niches, different games.
What channels should I watch alongside @dgikaos?
Of the scraped set, @imsayanroy (23,100 subs) is the only one with genuine viewing-pattern overlap — both channels appeal to people researching software and creator tools. The others are too off-topic to recommend. Honestly though, if you like @dgikaos's AI-video-for-creators angle, the better adjacent watches are probably English-language AI-tool channels in the 50K-200K range (Matt Wolfe, AI-focused review creators) that didn't show up in this comp set because the sub gap is too large for similarity algorithms to flag them.
Is @dgikaos the biggest channel in their niche?
Within this specific scraped set, no — @imsayanroy is larger at 23,100 subs versus @dgikaos's 12,600. But "the niche" here is fuzzy because Sayan's channel is software-reviews-with-affiliate-focus and @dgikaos is creator-tools-and-AI-video. Within the narrower AI-video-for-creators US lane, the scraped competitor set doesn't actually surface a clear leader, which could mean @dgikaos is well-positioned in an under-served sub-niche, or simply that the comparison data is incomplete. Worth checking against a broader manual scan.
What's the difference between @dgikaos and similar creators?
Three real differences stand out. First, geography: @dgikaos is US-based while the comp set is India-heavy, which changes audience purchase intent and ad rates significantly. Second, content focus: @dgikaos is creator-support + AI video tooling, whereas @imsayanroy is affiliate software reviews and @Sandhya-cg1nq looks like high-volume general content (3,100 videos is wild). Third, per-video efficiency: @dgikaos's ~83 subs per video lifetime is roughly 3x what @PixelSTEVE07 pulls and ~22x what Sandhya pulls, suggesting a tighter, more intentional content strategy.
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