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Competitor comparison · @jakkar_khan.01

@jakkar_khan.01 Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Analyzed

@jakkar_khan.01 (2,009 subs, 105 videos) sits in a competitor cluster with @ResterTest (1,830 subs), @KaranAs_FFM (1,100 subs), and @InvestwithDeclan (2,380 subs) — channels in roughly the same growth stage but spread across very different niches. The actual overlap is sub-count, not content.

Channel data · captured May 22, 2026

Handle
@jakkar_khan.01
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

The scraped competitor set here is honestly a mixed bag, and that's worth saying upfront. @jakkar_khan.01's description ("cut from video banata hu") suggests a Hindi-language edits/clips channel — probably gaming or movie cuts. The five channels surfaced as competitors include a Romanian software testing creator, an Australian FPS streamer, an Irish finance analyst, a Hindi mobile gaming channel, and a time-tracking product channel. What ties them together is mostly the 1K–4K sub bracket, not the content. So treating these as direct competitors in the "who's stealing my views" sense doesn't quite work — but treating them as channels at a similar growth stage with similar problems? That's where it gets useful.

@KaranAs_FFM (1,100 subs, 312 videos) is probably the closest cultural match in this list. Hindi commentary, mobile gaming (Free Fire specifically), small channel grinding regular uploads. The video count is the giveaway here — 312 videos to land at 1,100 subs is roughly 3.5 subs per video, which is the kind of math that tells you the audience hasn't compounded yet. If @jakkar_khan.01 is doing gaming cuts or Free Fire clips, KaranAs_FFM is basically the same scene one step further down the funnel. Worth following just to see what topics this audience clicks on and which videos break out (because something usually does once you cross 300 uploads). Subscribe if you want a peer-level read on what's working in Hindi mobile gaming.

@Quamii (3,560 subs, 1,900 videos) is interesting as a "what does this look like at 5x the videos" comparison. Australian, FPS-focused, Twitch-first streamer who repurposes streams to YouTube. The video-to-sub ratio is brutal — 1,900 uploads for 3,560 subs works out to about 1.9 subs per video, which is what happens when you dump full stream VODs without editing them down. The takeaway for a clips channel like @jakkar_khan.01 is the opposite lesson: tight edits compound, full streams don't. Worth watching if you want to see what not to do in terms of upload strategy, but his stream archive could be a goldmine if you're hunting for moments to cut.

@ResterTest (1,830 subs, 545 videos) is doing hands-on software testing content out of Romania. Totally different niche, but the sub count is within 200 of @jakkar_khan.01's, so the "what does growth look like at this stage" question is comparable. ResterTest's pitch — "breaking things, building tools" — is a clear, repeatable content premise, which is the thing most sub-2K channels are missing. There's no audience overlap to chase here. Follow ResterTest only if you're personally interested in QA/automation, otherwise this one's noise in the competitor set.

@InvestwithDeclan (2,380 subs, 455 videos) is the closest sub-count match — basically the same channel size as @jakkar_khan.01. Calm, Ireland-based finance commentary on stocks and crypto. The audience demographic doesn't overlap at all (English-language adult retail investors vs Hindi-language gaming/clips), but the "level-headed analysis" positioning is worth noting. He's carved out a specific tone, which is what's missing from most channels at this size. No reason to subscribe unless you actually want financial market takes, but his thumbnail and title approach is worth a scroll-through if you're studying click craft.

@rizeio (1,850 subs, 64 videos) is a product channel for a time-tracking app, not really a creator channel at all. The 64-video count is the tell — these are product demos and feature explainers, not personality-driven content. Including this in a "competitors" set doesn't really make sense for @jakkar_khan.01. Skip this one entirely.

If you watch @jakkar_khan.01, the only channel from this set that genuinely belongs in your sub feed is @KaranAs_FFM, and even that's mostly because of language and gaming overlap. The rest are useful as case studies in different things — Quamii for what oversaturation looks like, InvestwithDeclan for tone, ResterTest for content premise — but not as channels you'd actually watch alongside. The honest read: this competitor set is more about sub-count clustering than topic similarity.

Common questions

Who are @jakkar_khan.01's biggest competitors on YouTube?

Based on the scraped set, the closest competitor by niche is @KaranAs_FFM (1,100 subs), another small Hindi-language gaming channel focused on Free Fire mobile content. The other surfaced channels — @ResterTest (1,830 subs, software testing), @Quamii (3,560 subs, FPS gaming from Australia), @InvestwithDeclan (2,380 subs, finance), and @rizeio (1,850 subs, productivity software) — share the sub-count range but not the audience. Honestly, the real competitive set for @jakkar_khan.01 is probably hundreds of other small Hindi gaming-cuts channels that aren't surfaced here. The five listed are more like sub-count peers than content competitors.

How does @jakkar_khan.01 compare to @ResterTest?

They're within 200 subscribers of each other (@jakkar_khan.01 at 2,009, @ResterTest at 1,830), but that's where the similarity ends. ResterTest publishes hands-on software testing and automation content out of Romania — 545 videos focused on QA tooling, breaking things, building utilities. @jakkar_khan.01 is doing Hindi-language video cuts and edits, almost certainly gaming-adjacent based on the description. Different language, different niche, different audience entirely. The only useful comparison is growth stage: both are sub-2K channels still figuring out their audience, and both have video counts (105 and 545) that suggest active uploading without a clear breakout moment yet.

What channels should I watch alongside @jakkar_khan.01?

Realistically, only @KaranAs_FFM from this list is worth subscribing to if you came in via @jakkar_khan.01 — both are small Hindi-language gaming channels with overlapping audience interests. @Quamii's stream archive could be useful as raw clip material if @jakkar_khan.01 is making gaming highlights, but it's not really appointment viewing. The other three (@ResterTest, @InvestwithDeclan, @rizeio) don't share audience interests in any meaningful way. To find better complementary channels, search for other small Hindi creators doing gaming cuts or Free Fire highlights — that's where the actual viewer-side overlap is going to be.

Is @jakkar_khan.01 the biggest channel in their niche?

Not even close — but they're also not the smallest in this comparison set. At 2,009 subscribers, @jakkar_khan.01 sits in the middle of the pack here, larger than @KaranAs_FFM (1,100) and @ResterTest (1,830), smaller than @InvestwithDeclan (2,380) and @Quamii (3,560). The actual Hindi gaming-cuts niche on YouTube has channels well into the millions of subscribers, so 2K places this firmly in the early-growth bracket. The 105 video count suggests they've been at it for a while without a breakout moment, which is the most common pattern for channels at this size.

What's the difference between @jakkar_khan.01 and similar creators?

The biggest observable difference is content premise clarity. @ResterTest has a sharp pitch ("breaking things, building tools"), @InvestwithDeclan has a defined tone ("calm, level-headed analysis"), @Quamii has a clear format (FPS streams). @jakkar_khan.01's channel description ("cut from video banata hu") is vague — it tells you they make cuts but not from what, for whom, or in what style. That ambiguity probably matters more than any subscriber-count comparison. At 105 videos and 2K subs, the channels that break through usually do so once their premise becomes legible in about three seconds.

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