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Competitor comparison · @nixo-i8l

@nixo-i8l Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Analyzed (2026)

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@nixo-i8l (5,780 subs, 63 videos) sits in a loose Indian creator cluster alongside @anaamrasool (10,400 subs) and @SuccessTamilInspire (9,080 subs). The key differentiator: @nixo-i8l is gaming-focused with low upload volume, while most of its algorithmic neighbors run high-cadence motivational or tech content in completely different lanes.

Channel data · captured Jun 21, 2026

Handle
@nixo-i8l
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

The interesting thing about looking at @nixo-i8l's competitor set is that it isn't a tight niche match — it's an audience-overlap cluster. YouTube groups these channels because the same Indian viewers click around between them, not because they make the same kind of content. That happens a lot with smaller gaming channels in India: the algorithm pulls in motivational creators, language-learning channels, even tech tutorial folks, because the regional and demographic signals dominate before the topical ones kick in. So when reading this list, the real question isn't "who's making the same video?" — it's "who's pulling from the same attention pool?"

@cocos157 (8,440 subs, 61 videos) is the closest video-count match in the set. They've published 61 videos to @nixo-i8l's 63, which is almost identical. That matters because both are early-stage channels uploading at a similar cadence, but @cocos157 is sitting at roughly 1.5x the subscriber base. The conversion math works out to about 138 subs per video for @cocos157 vs 92 for @nixo-i8l. Not a huge gap, but a real one. Worth checking what @cocos157 is doing differently per upload — thumbnails, hooks, title structure. Follow @cocos157 if you're a creator trying to benchmark conversion rate at the same publishing volume.

@anaamrasool (10,400 subs, 367 videos) is a software engineer from Jammu working in Bangalore's tech scene, covering AI agents, automation, NoCode, and SaaS. Largest channel in the set, totally different content lane — but the audience overlap likely comes from young Indian male viewers who watch both gaming and tech tutorials. The math is rough: 367 videos for 10,400 subs is about 28 subs per video, well below @nixo-i8l's 92. High-volume tech content has a lower per-video conversion but compounds in evergreen search traffic over time. Different game entirely from what @nixo-i8l is playing.

@SuccessTamilInspire (9,080 subs, 518 videos) is a Tamil-language motivational channel running what looks like daily uploads. About 17 subs per video, the lowest conversion in the set, but motivational content lives on autoplay and Shorts watch loops where the unit economics are different. Not a creator @nixo-i8l should mimic, but a useful reminder that high-volume, low-conversion strategies still build a base when the format demands it. Worth watching if you're thinking about what happens when you push frequency way up and let the algorithm do the sorting.

@rajshamanivision (4,220 subs, 277 videos) is a fan/clip channel curating content from Raj Shamani, the Indian entrepreneur and podcaster. Smaller than @nixo-i8l by about 1,500 subs but with more than 4x the video count. A 277-video catalog producing only 4,220 subs (about 15 subs per video) tells you fan-clip channels in the Indian creator-economy space are saturated — viewers tend to go to the original Shamani channel instead. Useful as a cautionary data point on derivative content strategies in 2026, when audiences increasingly route around clip aggregators.

@brokenEagles (4,420 subs, 306 videos) does Indian language learning — daily phrases translated across Tamil, Telugu, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, plus emotional and love quotes. Closest sub count to @nixo-i8l in the set (within about 1,400 subs). Multi-language, low-production, high-frequency model — 306 videos and they're still under 5K subs. The cross-regional language hook is what's interesting because it explains the audience overlap with @nixo-i8l: a pan-India viewer base, not a state-specific one. If you want to understand how YouTube's recommendation system groups Indian creators by demographic rather than topic, this channel sitting next to a gaming creator is the proof.

If you watch @nixo-i8l for gameplay and gaming moments, none of these five are direct content substitutes — that's the honest read. The set is an algorithmic neighborhood, not a niche peer group. The closest functional comparable for benchmarking is @cocos157 because of the matching video count and similar early-channel trajectory. For the others, treat the list as a signal about who YouTube thinks shares your audience, not who's competing for the same searches. If you're hunting for true gaming peers, you'd need to search by game title or gameplay format directly — the similar-channels algorithm in 2026 is doing demographic clustering first, content matching second.

Common questions

Who are @nixo-i8l's biggest competitors on YouTube?

By subscriber count, @nixo-i8l's largest algorithmic neighbors are @anaamrasool at 10,400 subs (AI and tech content from a Bangalore software engineer) and @SuccessTamilInspire at 9,080 subs (daily Tamil motivational uploads). @cocos157 sits at 8,440 subs and is probably the closest functional comparable because they have nearly identical video counts — 61 vs @nixo-i8l's 63. The smaller channels in the set, @brokenEagles (4,420) and @rajshamanivision (4,220), sit below @nixo-i8l's 5,780. None of these are gaming-niche competitors though; they're audience-overlap matches based on the Indian viewer demographic rather than shared content.

How does @nixo-i8l compare to @cocos157?

@cocos157 has 8,440 subs to @nixo-i8l's 5,780, but the video counts are basically the same — 61 vs 63. That's the cleanest comparison point in the set because publishing volume is matched. The conversion math: @cocos157 averages about 138 subs per video, @nixo-i8l about 92. Roughly a 50% gap in per-upload conversion. I can't see thumbnails, titles, or retention curves from outside, so it's hard to call exactly what's driving the difference, but at matched volume that's the variable to dig into. Worth A/B testing thumbnail style or hook timing if you're @nixo-i8l trying to close the gap.

What channels should I watch alongside @nixo-i8l?

Honestly, none of the five competitors here will scratch the same gaming itch — they're algorithmic neighbors, not content peers. If you came for gameplay and funny moments, the closest tone match is probably @cocos157 since it's also early-stage and similarly paced. If you came for the broader Indian YouTube creator-economy vibe, @anaamrasool's AI tutorials and @rajshamanivision's curated business content fill different slots. For true gaming peers you'd want to search by game title directly — the similar-channels feature in 2026 leans heavily on demographic clustering rather than topical overlap, which is why this particular list looks so varied.

Is @nixo-i8l the biggest channel in their niche?

No — at 5,780 subs, @nixo-i8l sits in the middle of this five-channel set. @anaamrasool leads at 10,400, followed by @SuccessTamilInspire (9,080) and @cocos157 (8,440). @brokenEagles (4,420) and @rajshamanivision (4,220) are smaller. But "biggest in the niche" is a tricky question here because the niche isn't unified — it's a regional cluster, not a topic. Within actual Indian gaming YouTube, 5,780 subs is small-to-mid; channels like Total Gaming or Techno Gamerz sit in the multi-million range. So mid-pack in this algorithmic group, small in the broader gaming vertical.

What's the difference between @nixo-i8l and similar creators?

The biggest observable difference is content lane. @nixo-i8l is gaming-focused with 63 videos in catalog, while the algorithmic peers split into motivational (@SuccessTamilInspire, 518 videos), tech tutorials (@anaamrasool, 367 videos), creator-economy clips (@rajshamanivision, 277 videos), and language learning (@brokenEagles, 306 videos). Video count is the second clear divide — @nixo-i8l publishes way less than most of this set. The one exception is @cocos157 with 61 videos. So the differentiator is partly topic and partly cadence: @nixo-i8l is a lower-volume gaming play in a cluster dominated by high-volume, non-gaming content aimed at the same Indian viewer base.

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