Grow Creator
Competitor comparison · @msquaretech.official

@msquaretech.official Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared

Free creator diagnostic

Run a free YouTube channel audit on your own channel

Paste your channel handle and get a free read of the bottleneck holding back your Shorts, uploads, or channel positioning. No signup and no card for the first read.

@msquaretech.official (46,100 subs, 85 videos) operates in the Indian tech review space, sitting close in size to @wealthforall (44,000 subs) and @fictitiousway (42,500 subs). The key differentiator is publishing pace — msquaretech runs lean at 85 videos while @fictitiousway has shipped 219 and @warlords22 over 1,100.

Channel data · captured Jun 21, 2026

Handle
@msquaretech.official
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

The honest thing to say upfront: this isn't a clean topical competitor set. msquaretech covers smartphones, gadgets, tips, and reviews — pretty firmly in the Indian tech content lane. Most of the channels in this similar-creators bucket aren't tech reviewers. They're channels in roughly the same 25K–45K sub band, mostly Indian, mostly occupying the same mid-tier slot in the creator economy. Treat this less as "five rival tech channels" and more as "five channels you'd be benchmarking against if you were tracking creator growth at this size." If you're an audience scout looking specifically for the next tech review channel, you'll probably find only one near-match here. The rest are useful as cadence and growth-pattern comparisons.

@fictitiousway (42,500 subs) is the closest match by raw channel shape. Ishaan's channel sits right alongside msquaretech's 46,100, both based in India, and the content is education-leaning rather than tech-strict — science experiments, history lessons, the whole "learn something new every day" framing. The interesting gap: 219 videos against msquaretech's 85. That's roughly 2.5x the output for roughly the same audience size, which tells you Ishaan is grinding volume while msquaretech is running a leaner library with stronger per-video pull. Follow @fictitiousway if you want a broader Indian edutainment angle or if you're studying how higher upload volume stacks per-video views. Stay on msquaretech if you specifically want smartphone reviews and gadget commentary — Ishaan won't cover a OnePlus launch.

@wealthforall (44,000 subs, 73 videos) is the channel that mirrors msquaretech's economics most cleanly. Abhishek Chouhan publishes personal finance content — stock market, mutual funds, SIPs — for Indian retail investors. 73 videos versus msquaretech's 85 is almost identical lifetime output, and sub counts sit within 5% of each other. That's a useful tell: both creators have climbed to ~45K on restrained publishing schedules, which usually means stronger per-video performance than the high-output channels in this set. Follow @wealthforall if you're studying audience-size peers across niches, or if you're a viewer who watches both tech and personal finance — there's genuine overlap in the "young Indian guy, optimizing his life and his wallet" demo.

@Harshit18Cric is the strangest comparison in the group. 36,400 subs from just 6 videos is wild — that's a ratio you basically never see outside of a recently-viral channel or a shorts-driven account. Cricket content for an Indian audience partially explains the velocity (cricket is the highest-volume content category in India), but msquaretech and Harshit share essentially nothing topically. The only honest reason to put Harshit alongside msquaretech is as a study in how quickly a niche can pull subs when it's culturally aligned. 6 videos to 36K should reframe how you think about niche selection, not who you watch next. If you're msquaretech, Harshit isn't really a competitor — he's a data point about content gravity.

@StudyBuzz-n5v (23,200 subs, 535 videos) and @warlords22 (28,600 subs, 1,100 videos) round out the set as cadence outliers. StudyBuzz is a CS aspirant grinding study content — 535 videos to hit 23K means per-video views are likely modest but the channel is showing up in long-tail search and study-companion contexts. Warlords is the only US-based channel here, posting Souls-borne gameplay, sitting on an almost absurd 1,100 video library against msquaretech's 85. Neither is a direct competitor. But if you're msquaretech wondering whether to push library size from 85 to 200, these two are your warning shot — high volume doesn't automatically convert to higher sub counts. msquaretech is meaningfully outperforming both per-video.

If you watch @msquaretech.official, the most natural co-watch in this set is @wealthforall — same demographic, same publishing rhythm, complementary topic. @fictitiousway is a reasonable second if you like the broader explainer energy. The rest are either niche-misaligned (Harshit, Warlords) or audience-too-different (StudyBuzz). Worth flagging: none of these five are direct smartphone-and-gadget review competitors, so msquaretech's real topical rivals are probably channels outside this scrape. For a creator benchmarking themselves against msquaretech, the takeaway from this set is that 85 videos to 46K subs is a strong per-upload ratio worth holding onto.

Common questions

Who are @msquaretech.official's biggest competitors on YouTube?

By raw audience size, @wealthforall (44,000 subs) and @fictitiousway (42,500 subs) are msquaretech's closest peers near the 46,100 mark. Neither is a topical match — wealthforall is personal finance, fictitiousway is general education — but both are Indian creators occupying the same audience tier. The honest read is that msquaretech doesn't have many direct tech-review competitors inside this specific scrape; the real rivals likely sit outside this dataset. For benchmarking growth patterns, @wealthforall is the cleanest comparison: 73 videos to msquaretech's 85, near-identical sub count, similar restrained-publishing approach to a mid-tier Indian audience.

How does @msquaretech.official compare to @Harshit18Cric?

They're not really comparable. msquaretech has 46,100 subs from 85 videos covering tech reviews; @Harshit18Cric has 36,400 subs from just 6 videos covering cricket. That 6-video subscriber count is the striking number — it suggests Harshit either went viral recently or is shorts-driven with enormous per-video impressions. Different niche, different audience, different content velocity entirely. The only takeaway is structural: cricket content in India runs on a content-to-subscriber ratio almost no tech channel will match. If you're msquaretech, Harshit isn't a competitor — he's a reminder that niche choice quietly sets your growth ceiling.

What channels should I watch alongside @msquaretech.official?

If you actually enjoy msquaretech's content, @wealthforall is the strongest co-watch — same Indian creator demographic, similar publishing pace, complementary topic in personal finance rather than tech. @fictitiousway works if you want broader edutainment energy without the smartphone focus. The other three in this competitor set — @Harshit18Cric (cricket), @StudyBuzz-n5v (CS study content), and @warlords22 (Souls-borne gameplay) — are too niche-divergent to recommend as natural co-watches. They share an audience-size band with msquaretech, not a viewer interest profile. For more tech content specifically, you'll probably need to scout outside this five-channel list.

Is @msquaretech.official the biggest channel in their niche?

Within this five-channel set, yes — msquaretech leads on subscriber count at 46,100, ahead of @wealthforall (44,000) and @fictitiousway (42,500). But this isn't a niche-specific comparison, it's a size-tier comparison across mixed verticals. The Indian tech review niche as a whole has channels several orders of magnitude larger than msquaretech, so calling them the biggest in their niche overall would be inaccurate. Within this scrape's audience band, though, msquaretech sits on top with strong per-video efficiency: 46K subs from 85 videos beats both the higher-output channels (Warlords at 1,100 videos, 28,600 subs) and the lower-tier ones.

What's the difference between @msquaretech.official and similar creators?

The clearest differentiator is publishing efficiency. msquaretech has reached 46,100 subs in 85 videos — roughly 542 subs per upload as a lifetime ratio. Compare that to @warlords22 (28,600 subs from 1,100 videos, ~26 per video) or @StudyBuzz-n5v (23,200 from 535, ~43 per video). Against closer peers msquaretech still edges @fictitiousway (~194 per video) and roughly matches @wealthforall (~603 per video). Topically, msquaretech is the only smartphone-and-gadget reviewer in this set — the other four span general education, personal finance, cricket, and gaming. So the difference is both content angle and how productively each channel converts uploads into subscribers.

Free creator diagnostic

Run a free YouTube channel audit on your own channel

Paste your channel handle and get a free read of the bottleneck holding back your Shorts, uploads, or channel positioning. No signup and no card for the first read.