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Competitor comparison · @gwynblade3378

@gwynblade3378 Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared

@gwynblade3378 (13,700 subs, 366 videos, India-based) competes most directly with @LostSavePoint9 (17,400 subs) and @exilas8699 (10,000 subs), both gaming channels. The key differentiator: @LostSavePoint9 focuses on hidden secrets and easter eggs while @gwynblade3378 covers broader gameplay and walkthroughs across new releases and timeless classics.

Channel data · captured May 21, 2026

Handle
@gwynblade3378
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

Gaming on YouTube is a huge tent — there's the AAA gameplay channels, the speedrunners, the lore/secrets explainers, the FPS-specific creators, the cozy gaming streamers. @gwynblade3378 sits in the broad gameplay/walkthrough lane with 366 videos across roughly four years of activity. That's a wide net. The competitor set scraped here reflects that breadth, and honestly some of these matches feel closer than others. Three of the five are clearly in the same gaming-content lane. Two of them are pretty different beasts. Worth being upfront about that before digging in.

**@LostSavePoint9 (17,400 subs, 315 videos)** is the closest direct match in my read. US-based, focused on what they call gaming secrets, hidden locations, developer details, and easter eggs. Their video-to-sub ratio is about 55 subs per video uploaded — meaningfully more efficient than @gwynblade3378's roughly 37 subs per video. That's not a huge gap, but it suggests the niche-down on hidden details converts browsers into subs at a higher rate than broader gameplay coverage does. If you're a viewer who likes the deep-dive angle — "things you missed in [game]" type content — LostSavePoint is probably your watch. If you want more variety and active commentary across new releases, gwynblade's broader catalog covers more ground.

**@exilas8699 (10,000 subs, 2,000 videos)** is the volume play here. 2,000 videos to 10K subs works out to roughly 5 subs per video, which is a grind. Their lane is hyper-specific: weapon showcases and reload animations across Call of Duty and other FPS titles. There's a real audience for that — it's a search-driven niche where someone types "M4A1 reload animation" and ends up there. The overlap with gwynblade is the gaming umbrella, but exilas is essentially a single-format channel running at industrial scale, while gwynblade looks more like a generalist gaming creator. Different strategy entirely. Follow exilas if you specifically care about FPS gunplay aesthetics.

**@tedskii (15,100 subs, 37 videos)** is the outlier on efficiency — 37 videos, 15K subs, which is about 408 subs per video uploaded. That's an order of magnitude above everyone else in this set. The description is sparse (basically just a business inquiry email), so it's hard to tell what the content actually looks like without watching, but those numbers usually mean either viral hits or very high-production-value content that takes weeks per upload. Either way, that's a completely different operating model than gwynblade's 366-video catalog. Worth studying if you're curious how high-leverage content compares to high-volume.

I'd flag two of the scraped "competitors" as probably not real competitors. **@mariwithteas (9,240 subs, 216 videos)** out of Brazil is a study/cozy-lifestyle channel — "romanticizing her study days" — which has basically zero overlap with gaming content. The scraper likely grabbed them based on regional or demographic signals rather than topic. Could be a content-discovery quirk. **@zeliosagency (15,300 subs, 45 videos)** is a B2B video production agency targeting SaaS and tech companies for marketing video work. They're not a creator channel in the same sense at all — different business model, different audience, different intent. I'd ignore both of these for purposes of competitive benchmarking.

So the real competitor short-list, if you trust the topical data more than the algorithm's guess at adjacency, is @LostSavePoint9, @exilas8699, and arguably @tedskii. Three channels, three different gaming-content strategies: deep-niche secrets, hyper-volume FPS, and low-volume high-leverage. @gwynblade3378 falls somewhere in the middle — broader than a single-niche channel like exilas, more volume than tedskii, but less specialized than LostSavePoint. That middle position is fine but it's the hardest one to grow from, because there's no obvious search hook the way "easter eggs in [game]" gives LostSavePoint a clear hand to play.

If you watch @gwynblade3378, you should also queue up @LostSavePoint9 for the same gaming sensibility with a tighter editorial angle, and @exilas8699 if you skew toward FPS specifically. Skip the lifestyle and agency channels — those are noise in this particular comparison set.

Common questions

Who are @gwynblade3378's biggest competitors on YouTube?

Based on the scraped set, the closest matches are @LostSavePoint9 (17,400 subs, gaming secrets and easter eggs), @exilas8699 (10,000 subs, FPS weapon showcases), and @tedskii (15,100 subs, content type unclear from description but a high sub-per-video ratio). All three sit in or adjacent to gwynblade's gameplay lane. Two other names in the scrape — @mariwithteas (cozy study content) and @zeliosagency (B2B video agency) — don't actually overlap on topic. The realistic competitor list is three channels, not five.

How does @gwynblade3378 compare to @tedskii?

They're playing completely different games. @gwynblade3378 has 366 videos and 13,700 subs — a high-volume catalog approach. @tedskii has 37 videos and 15,100 subs, which works out to about 408 subscribers per upload versus gwynblade's roughly 37 per upload. That's close to a 10x efficiency gap. Tedskii's description is too thin to tell exactly what the content is, but those numbers usually mean either viral one-off hits or very high-effort productions that take weeks each. Different strategy entirely from gwynblade's broader gameplay coverage.

What channels should I watch alongside @gwynblade3378?

For overlapping gaming content, @LostSavePoint9 is the closest match — same broad gaming sensibility but tighter focus on hidden details and easter eggs. @exilas8699 is worth following if you're specifically into FPS weapon showcases and reload animations across Call of Duty and similar titles. Those two cover most of the real topic overlap with gwynblade. The other channels in the scraped set don't really fit — @mariwithteas runs a cozy study aesthetic and @zeliosagency is a B2B marketing agency, not a creator channel in the gaming-content sense.

Is @gwynblade3378 the biggest channel in their niche?

No. In this scraped comparison set, three channels have higher subscriber counts: @LostSavePoint9 at 17,400, @zeliosagency at 15,300, and @tedskii at 15,100. @gwynblade3378's 13,700 puts them roughly in the middle of the pack. That said, sub count is a lagging metric — upload cadence, engagement, and watch time tell a more useful story, and most of that data isn't visible from outside the channel. Within the actual gaming-creator subset of this comparison, gwynblade sits just behind LostSavePoint9.

What's the difference between @gwynblade3378 and similar creators?

Mostly positioning. @gwynblade3378 runs a generalist gaming channel — gameplay, walkthroughs, news, mixed across both new releases and classics. The competitive set leans more specialized: @LostSavePoint9 niches into secrets and easter eggs, @exilas8699 focuses entirely on FPS weapon showcases. Specialization tends to convert browsers to subs at a higher rate, but generalists have a larger total addressable audience. India-based versus US/Brazil-based likely shapes the audience demographic too, though that's harder to read from sub counts alone without watching the actual videos.

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