@pixudomain2.0 Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared
@pixudomain2.0 (8,360 subs, 21 videos) sits closest to @mariwithteas (9,240 subs) and @exilas8699 (10,000 subs) by subscriber count, but the actual content overlap is loose. The key differentiator is library depth — pixudomain has 21 videos against exilas8699's 2,000.
Channel data · captured May 14, 2026
- Handle
- @pixudomain2.0
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
Pixudomain2.0 lists itself as "animation" and that's basically all the public signal there is. 8,360 subs against just 21 uploads is a notable ratio — about 398 subs per video, which is well above what most channels this size pull. So when you're hunting for competitors, you're not really comparing to other channels with the same content shape. You're comparing to channels in the same sub bracket, channels that touch animation, or channels whose audience might overlap. The set below covers all three angles, and honestly none of them are a clean 1:1 match. That's worth saying out loud.
@exilas8699 (10,000 subs) is the closest content-adjacent channel here. They run weapon showcases and reload animations from Call of Duty and other FPS games — so technically animation-adjacent, but it's game-engine animation, not original animation work. The huge tell is their library: 2,000 videos to hit 10K subs. That's roughly 5 subs per upload, which is the opposite of pixudomain's economics. Exilas is grinding volume, pixudomain is (apparently) waiting for hits. Follow exilas if you want a feed of constant FPS animation content. Follow pixudomain if you'd rather see fewer, bigger swings.
@zeliosagency (15,100 subs, 45 videos) is the most interesting comparison from a creator-economics standpoint. They're a Ukraine-based video production agency doing marketing videos for SaaS and AI companies. Different intent entirely — they're using YouTube as a portfolio, not a content business. But the upload pattern actually rhymes with pixudomain: very few videos, decent sub count. About 335 subs per video for zelios versus 398 for pixudomain. If pixudomain is in fact doing animation portfolio work for clients, zelios is basically the more mature version of that playbook. Worth watching if you want to see where the low-volume/high-quality animation lane leads.
@mariwithteas (9,240 subs, Brazil, 216 videos) is the audience-overlap pick rather than content-overlap. She's doing study aesthetic / cozy-life vlogs — completely different genre. But that aesthetic-leaning, soft-edge audience overlaps heavily with the kind of viewer who watches stylized animation. 43 subs per video here, which is in line with the cozy-vlog niche where people upload often. Different country (Brazil), different format, different rhythm — but if pixudomain's animation has any soft / aesthetic / ambient feel to it, mari's audience is the kind of person who'd click. Watch her for audience signal, not content ideas.
@ShikshaStudyAbroadOfficial (15,600 subs, 1,200 videos, India) is the outlier in this set, and probably the loosest fit. They're a study-abroad education platform — corporate channel, not a creator. 13 subs per video. Their inclusion in a similarity set probably comes from co-watch data: viewers who watch animated explainer-style content also watch educational content. If pixudomain is doing any kind of explainer animation, shiksha is a useful reference for how a high-volume education channel structures its uploads. Otherwise, this is mostly a co-viewer overlap rather than a creative one.
@Codemyhobby (4,520 subs, 272 videos, Nigeria) is the smallest channel in the set and the only one below pixudomain's sub count. Web design tutorials and CSS / JavaScript project walkthroughs. About 16 subs per video — the classic tutorial channel grind. The connection to animation is probably CSS animation or motion design content. Worth following if you're a creator looking at how to build a teaching-format channel from scratch, since codemyhobby's curve is what most creators actually experience: a lot of uploads for slow growth.
If you watch @pixudomain2.0 and want to fill out a feed, the honest split is this: @exilas8699 for more animation-adjacent content, @zeliosagency to see where small-library animation channels can go, @mariwithteas for the aesthetic-audience crossover, and @codemyhobby if you're studying the build-it-from-zero side of the niche. The real story across all of them is that pixudomain is doing more with less than anyone else in the set, and that's the thing actually worth paying attention to.
Common questions
Who are @pixudomain2.0's biggest competitors on YouTube?
By subscriber count, the closest channels are @exilas8699 (10,000 subs) and @mariwithteas (9,240 subs), with @zeliosagency (15,100 subs) and @ShikshaStudyAbroadOfficial (15,600 subs) sitting one tier above. The smallest in the comparison set is @Codemyhobby at 4,520 subs. Of these, exilas8699 is the only one doing actual animation content (FPS weapon and reload animation), so it's the closest content-side competitor. The others overlap on audience or format rather than topic. Pixudomain's tiny 21-video library makes direct competition fuzzy.
How does @pixudomain2.0 compare to @exilas8699?
These two are the cleanest content match in the set, but the strategies are opposite. Pixudomain has 8,360 subs across 21 videos — roughly 398 subs per upload. Exilas8699 has 10,000 subs across 2,000 videos — about 5 subs per upload. Same niche neighborhood (animation), totally different economics. Exilas is running a high-volume FPS game animation channel where individual videos do small numbers but the catalog compounds. Pixudomain looks like it's chasing fewer, larger hits. Different time investment, different risk profile, different revenue model entirely if either is monetized.
What channels should I watch alongside @pixudomain2.0?
Best companion picks from the data: @exilas8699 if you want more animation content in a similar size range, and @zeliosagency if you're curious about where a low-upload, high-production-value channel can scale to. @mariwithteas is worth a watch only if pixudomain's animation has an aesthetic or cozy lean — her Brazilian study-vlog audience tends to overlap with stylized visual content viewers. Skip @ShikshaStudyAbroadOfficial unless you're specifically interested in education content, since the connection there is loose. The set isn't a tight cluster, so pick based on what specifically you like about pixudomain.
Is @pixudomain2.0 the biggest channel in their niche?
No — at 8,360 subs, pixudomain is mid-tier in this comparison set. The largest is @ShikshaStudyAbroadOfficial at 15,600 subs, followed by @zeliosagency at 15,100. @exilas8699 sits just above pixudomain at 10,000 subs. The only smaller channel in the set is @Codemyhobby at 4,520. That said, pixudomain has by far the highest subs-per-video ratio at around 398, which suggests their individual videos are pulling more weight than anyone else in the comparison. Channel size is one metric; per-video pull is another, and pixudomain wins on the second one.
What's the difference between @pixudomain2.0 and similar creators?
The one consistent gap: library size. Pixudomain has 21 videos. The other channels range from 45 (@zeliosagency) to 2,000 (@exilas8699). That's a fundamentally different content strategy. Pixudomain is either very new, very selective, or treating YouTube as a portfolio rather than a publishing schedule. Geography also varies — pixudomain is US-based, while the comparison set spans Brazil, Ukraine, India, and Nigeria. So this isn't a regional cluster. The thread tying them together is loose audience overlap and similar subscriber tier, not a shared content vertical or production approach.
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