@ottomatic.tech. Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared
@ottomatic.tech. (17,300 subs, 229 videos) sits in a strange middle zone — closest in size to @Arifrahmanextra (20,200) and @KKtech93 (19,900 subs, 587 videos). The key observable difference: ottomatic publishes generalist tech with a self-described random angle, while the rest commit to a narrow vertical.
Channel data · captured May 16, 2026
- Handle
- @ottomatic.tech.
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
The competitor set here is messier than it looks. ottomatic.tech. describes itself as "just a guy who makes random tech videos" with that shrug emoji, and the YouTube algorithm has clustered them next to channels that are way more vertical-specific — AI graphic design, exam prep, study aesthetics, hindi gadget reviews. That suggests ottomatic is competing for tech-curious viewers in the 17K-22K band, but the audience overlap with any single channel below is probably partial at best. Worth noting upfront: three of the five competitors are India-based, which hints at where ottomatic's geographic pull might actually be even though their own country isn't listed.
@GREATWITHAI01 (22,800 subs, 155 videos, Nigeria) is the largest channel in this set and probably the closest "sibling" in terms of pulling tech-adjacent viewers. They're laser-focused on AI graphic design tutorials for small business owners and content creators — a much tighter audience than ottomatic's everything-bucket approach. They've done it with only 155 uploads versus ottomatic's 229, which means their subs-per-video ratio is meaningfully better (147 vs 76). If you're researching how a narrower positioning can outperform a generalist channel at similar scale, GREATWITHAI01 is the one to study. Follow them instead of ottomatic if you specifically want AI design pipelines, not random tech.
@Arifrahmanextra (20,200 subs, 95 videos, India) is the most efficient channel here by a wide margin — 212 subs per video. Arif's lane is board exam strategy, productivity, time management. That's not tech overlap at all, honestly, so the algorithm pairing here is curious — possibly ottomatic's audience skews toward students who also watch productivity creators. Arif uploads less than half as often as ottomatic but converts harder per video. If you're an ottomatic viewer and the overlap exists, it's probably because you're a student watching tech content during study breaks. Follow Arif for exam grind content, not gadgets.
@Aspirant.Diaries (18,100 subs, 282 videos, India) — handle @Aspirant.Diaries, run by someone going by Tabby — is the aesthetic study-vlog corner of YouTube. Cozy fonts, mindful framing, established October 2023. That's a fast climb to 18K in roughly 18 months if the established date is accurate. They have more uploads than ottomatic despite being newer, which is a different cadence philosophy entirely. The overlap with ottomatic's audience is thin unless ottomatic's viewers skew young and aspirational. Watch Aspirant.Diaries for the soft-aesthetic study niche, not because it's a tech alternative.
@KKtech93 (19,900 subs, 587 videos, India) is the volume play in this set. 587 videos to ottomatic's 229 — more than 2.5x the upload count for only slightly more subs. The math there isn't flattering: roughly 34 subs per video versus ottomatic's 76. KKtech93 is hindi-language gadget unboxing and mobile reviews, which is a saturated lane. This is probably ottomatic's most direct content-overlap competitor in terms of "tech videos for a general audience," even if the language differs. If you want frequent gadget coverage, KKtech93 wins on cadence. If you want more thoughtfully-spaced videos, ottomatic is the pick.
@LearnWithInterview-Hindi (9,720 subs, 118 videos) is the outlier — the only sub-10K channel in the set and the only one focused on UPSC exam prep and motivational content. Honestly, including them as a competitor feels like a stretch unless the algorithm sees a motivational-tech crossover I'm not seeing from the outside. Their subs-per-video ratio (82) is actually similar to ottomatic's 76, which is the one shared trait worth noting. Follow them only if motivational UPSC content is what you're after.
If you watch @ottomatic.tech., the most natural co-watches from this set are probably @KKtech93 (closest content overlap) and @GREATWITHAI01 (closest in size and tech-adjacency, much sharper niche). The others — Arif, Aspirant, LearnWithInterview — sit in study/exam territory and likely share ottomatic's audience only at the edges. The bigger takeaway: ottomatic's generalist positioning is what makes their competitor cluster look this scattered.
Common questions
Who are @ottomatic.tech.'s biggest competitors on YouTube?
Based on the scraped set, ottomatic.tech.'s closest size-peers are @GREATWITHAI01 (22,800 subs) and @Arifrahmanextra (20,200 subs), followed by @KKtech93 (19,900) and @Aspirant.Diaries (18,100). Of those, @KKtech93 is the most direct content overlap because they also cover gadget reviews and mobile tech, just in hindi and at much higher upload volume — 587 videos versus ottomatic's 229. @GREATWITHAI01 is the closest tech-adjacent competitor with a tighter AI-design focus.
How does @ottomatic.tech. compare to @GREATWITHAI01?
GREATWITHAI01 has roughly 5,500 more subscribers (22,800 vs 17,300) but did it with 74 fewer videos. That's a big efficiency gap — GREATWITHAI01 averages around 147 subs per upload, ottomatic around 76. The content angle differs too: GREATWITHAI01 is a vertical AI graphic design channel targeting business owners, while ottomatic openly describes itself as random tech. Honestly, the comparison suggests a tighter niche tends to convert better at this scale, though ottomatic's broader content could have longer-tail appeal.
What channels should I watch alongside @ottomatic.tech.?
For tech viewers, @KKtech93 is the most obvious co-watch — same general lane, just heavier on gadget unboxings and in hindi. @GREATWITHAI01 fits if you want AI tools and design tutorials. The other three in the set — @Arifrahmanextra, @Aspirant.Diaries, @LearnWithInterview-Hindi — are study and exam-prep channels, which only make sense as co-watches if you're a student dipping into tech content. From outside the data I can't see watch-time overlap, but content-wise that's the split.
Is @ottomatic.tech. the biggest channel in their niche?
No. Within this competitor set, ottomatic.tech. (17,300 subs) is the fourth-largest of six. @GREATWITHAI01 leads at 22,800, then @Arifrahmanextra at 20,200, then @KKtech93 at 19,900. Ottomatic sits below them, with @Aspirant.Diaries (18,100) just ahead and @LearnWithInterview-Hindi (9,720) trailing. Worth flagging — these are scraped competitors the algorithm groups them with, not the full universe of tech YouTubers, so the actual tech-niche leaderboard looks very different at the top.
What's the difference between @ottomatic.tech. and similar creators?
The main observable difference is positioning. Ottomatic explicitly markets as random tech — a generalist. The five competitors all commit to specific verticals: AI design (@GREATWITHAI01), board exams (@Arifrahmanextra), aesthetic study content (@Aspirant.Diaries), hindi gadget reviews (@KKtech93), UPSC prep (@LearnWithInterview-Hindi). Three are India-based, which is a geographic concentration ottomatic doesn't share. Cadence varies wildly too — @KKtech93 has 587 videos, @Arifrahmanextra only 95. Ottomatic's 229 sits roughly in the middle of the pack.
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