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Competitor comparison · @iamanikarani

@iamanikarani Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels at 24K Subs

@iamanikarani (24,000 subs, Melbourne-based) sits in the same subscriber tier as @kallawaytech (47,800) and @Decode_withmee (38,400), but the content overlap is thinner than YouTube's sidebar suggests. The clearest differentiator is library size: Anika has 328 videos, while the closest 'similar' channels range from 128 to 1,400.

Channel data · captured May 17, 2026

Handle
@iamanikarani
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

Honest framing first: @iamanikarani is a Melbourne creator doing life, career, creativity and fulfilment essays — a small but distinct corner of YouTube that's adjacent to vlogs, self-help, and what you'd loosely call lifestyle-thought-pieces. The competitor set surfaced for this channel skews toward tech, AI, and gaming, which tells me the algorithm is matching on subscriber-tier and watch-time-shape more than topic. That mismatch is itself useful information. If you're scouting this niche, the takeaway is that there isn't a tightly defined competitor cluster around Anika — she's competing more with the general 'reflective creator in their twenties' bucket than with any single channel below.

@kallawaytech (47,800 subs, US, 220 videos) is roughly double Anika's subscriber count with a third fewer videos. That's a different production model entirely — tighter library, faster sub-acceleration, almost certainly riding the AI news cycle. The audience overlap with Anika is probably limited to viewers who consume both 'what tools should I use' content and 'how should I think about my career' content, which is actually a real Venn diagram. Follow Kallaway if you want to track how a single-topic tech channel scales fast in 2025-2026; follow Anika if you want a slower, more personal frame on the same career-anxiety undercurrent.

@Decode_withmee (38,400 subs, India, 128 videos) has the smallest library of the bunch and the highest subs-per-video ratio — roughly 300 subs per upload. That's a coding/AI-tools channel that has clearly found product-market fit fast. The comparison to Anika is almost purely structural: both creators are working in the sub-50K range, both are doing fewer-than-typical uploads, both lean on a distinct voice. The difference is that Decode_withmee is solving a Google-searchable problem ('how do I use Blackbox AI') and Anika is doing the harder, less searchable thing of building parasocial trust. Different game entirely.

@Benosaurus (13,400 subs, UK, 687 videos) is the most interesting comparison point because the numbers tell a story. 687 videos for 13.4K subs is roughly 19 subs per upload — that's a creator who's been at it a long time, in a niche (gaming mashups, detailed videos) where the algorithm is less generous. Anika's 328 videos for 24K is about 73 subs per upload, which is healthier on that metric. If you're a viewer who likes Anika's reflective tone, Benosaurus is probably not it. If you're a creator studying her, the lesson here is that library size doesn't automatically translate to subs in slower-growth niches.

@mmff (23,300 subs, Thailand, 1,400 videos) is basically Anika's subscriber twin with a wildly different production strategy. 1,400 videos for 23.3K subs works out to about 17 subs per upload — high-volume FreeFire gaming content where each video is presumably short and cheap to produce. The two channels would never show up on the same homepage for any real human viewer, but they sit in the same subscriber bracket. Worth noting only because it shows how many different paths lead to ~24K subs: Anika got there with 328 thoughtful uploads, mmff got there with 1,400 short ones. Neither is wrong.

@VerdashGamingYT (44,600 subs, India, 891 videos) rounds out the set as another high-volume gaming channel that's outperforming Anika on raw subs but presumably with a very different revenue and engagement profile. 891 videos in the gaming-comedy bucket reads as someone who's been uploading multiple times a week for years. No real audience overlap with a Melbourne life-essayist, but again, useful as a calibration point.

If you watch @iamanikarani, the honest answer is that none of these five are a true 'watch alongside' pick — the algorithm has matched on the wrong axis. You'd probably get more out of searching for other Melbourne-based reflective creators, or anyone in the 'multi-passionate twenties career thinking' space directly. The value of this competitor set is more for Anika herself: it shows she's in a thin niche, which is both her moat and her ceiling. Thin niches grow slower but the viewers who do stick tend to stick hard.

Common questions

Who are @iamanikarani's biggest competitors on YouTube?

Based on the surfaced competitor set, the closest channels by subscriber tier are @kallawaytech (47,800 subs) and @VerdashGamingYT (44,600 subs), though neither is a true topical competitor. Anika's actual niche — Melbourne-based reflective essays on career, creativity, and fulfilment — doesn't have a tight competitor cluster in the data I can see. She's competing more with the general 'thoughtful twenties creator' bucket than with any single channel. That's worth knowing because it changes the strategy: in a thin niche, you're not really fighting for the same viewer.

How does @iamanikarani compare to @kallawaytech?

Kallawaytech has roughly double the subscribers (47,800 vs 24,000) with a third fewer videos (220 vs 328). That's a faster growth curve on a smaller library, almost certainly because it's riding the AI news cycle in 2025-2026. Anika's content is harder to grow on — personal essays don't ride trending topics the same way. The audience overlap is probably limited to viewers who consume both career-anxiety content and AI-tools content, which is a real but narrow Venn diagram. Different games, similar tier.

What channels should I watch alongside @iamanikarani?

Honestly, none of the five competitors surfaced here are a great 'watch alongside' pick if you came for Anika's reflective Melbourne-life content. The set skews toward tech, AI, gaming, and FreeFire — matched by subscriber count, not by topic. You'd probably get more out of searching directly for other multi-passionate creators or Australia-based essayists in the same subscriber range. The competitor list is more useful for understanding Anika's market position than for finding your next subscription.

Is @iamanikarani the biggest channel in their niche?

Hard to say with confidence because the niche itself is fuzzy. At 24,000 subs with 328 videos, Anika is solidly mid-tier — bigger than @Benosaurus (13,400) but smaller than the rest of the surfaced set. Within the specific 'Melbourne reflective creator' corner she occupies, the data shown doesn't include a clear larger peer. That could mean the niche genuinely is small and she's near the top, or it could mean the algorithm hasn't surfaced her real competitors. Worth checking by hand.

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

The clearest structural difference is production model. Anika has 328 videos for 24K subs, working out to about 73 subs per upload — healthier than @mmff (17 subs/upload across 1,400 videos) or @Benosaurus (19 subs/upload across 687). The high-volume channels are grinding cheap content; Anika is doing fewer, more considered uploads. The trade-off shows up in growth rate: @Decode_withmee (38,400 subs from just 128 videos) is the opposite extreme — fewer videos, faster growth, but in a searchable tools niche that Anika's essay style can't easily replicate.

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