@vedanshi_chandanii Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared
@vedanshi_chandanii (5,150 subs, 39 videos) sits in a loosely defined micro-creator cluster alongside @Bgyanfacts (9,950 subs), @TheWienerGuy (4,970), and @Codemyhobby (4,540). The biggest observable difference: vedanshi has the highest subs-per-video ratio of the group at roughly 132, suggesting tighter output and stronger per-upload pull.
Channel data · captured May 20, 2026
- Handle
- @vedanshi_chandanii
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
First thing worth flagging — this isn't a tight niche. The five channels the algorithm has paired vedanshi with span Indian facts shorts, web-dev tutorials in Hindi, a hotdog enthusiast (yes, really), and a young creator publicly chasing 10K subs. So the "competitor" framing here is more about audience-discovery overlap than direct topical rivalry. The shared trait seems to be: small channels, under 10K, posting to YouTube's general English/Hindi micro-creator surface. Read this less as a head-to-head and more as a map of who shows up next to her in suggested feeds.
@Bgyanfacts (9,950 subs, 144 videos, India) is the biggest channel in the set and probably the closest thing to a benchmark. It's a Hindi-language facts-shorts channel — high-frequency, low-effort-per-video content built around the shorts feed. Bgyanfacts has roughly 4x vedanshi's video count and almost 2x her subs, but her subs-per-video ratio (~132) is actually higher than theirs (~69). That's worth sitting with. It suggests vedanshi's individual uploads are landing harder, or she's been more selective. Follow Bgyanfacts if you want to see what a more mature shorts factory looks like in the same general orbit.
@Codemyhobby (4,540 subs, 273 videos, Nigeria) is a web-development tutorial channel — crash courses, CSS and JS projects, the standard tutorial-channel format. Almost identical sub count to vedanshi but seven times the video volume. That's a totally different content economy: Codemyhobby is the long-haul tutorial grind where each video is a small bet on a search query, whereas vedanshi's 39 videos suggests something more episodic. If you're actually trying to learn frontend, Codemyhobby is the watch. If you found vedanshi for entertainment reasons, Codemyhobby probably isn't your next click — the algorithm pairing here feels weak.
@doumcoding (4,720 subs, 531 videos, India) is the most extreme version of the tutorial-grind pattern. Hindi-language coding channel, 531 uploads, fewer than 5K subs. That's a subs-per-video ratio of about 9, which is honestly rough — a lot of work for relatively thin compounding. Pairing it with vedanshi tells me the algorithm sees some India-adjacent signal here, possibly geographic or language-based. Watch doumcoding if Hindi coding tutorials are the actual goal; the channels otherwise have little in common.
@TheWienerGuy (4,970 subs, 264 videos) is the genuine outlier and honestly the most interesting data point. Channel description is one line: "I like Hotdogs!" with a hotdog emoji. 264 videos at almost 5K subs is a real audience for what is presumably hotdog content. Why this channel is being grouped with vedanshi is unclear to me — it could be format overlap (similar video length, similar thumbnail style) rather than topic. Worth noting because if the algorithm is reading them as similar, vedanshi's format might be more entertainment-coded than the coding channels in the set would suggest.
@onlyoyelmax (3,340 subs, 138 videos) is the smallest channel here and the one I'd watch most carefully as a peer. The bio is essentially a vertical "I LOVE YOU GUYS" plea and a public 10K-subscriber goal. That's a tell — it's a younger or earlier-stage creator working through the awkward audience-building phase out loud. Same vibe as a creator who hasn't quite locked in their angle yet. Vedanshi has more subs with a third the videos, so she's further along on whatever curve they're both on.
If you watch @vedanshi_chandanii, the closest thematic siblings in this set are probably @Bgyanfacts (for the shorts-format / Indian-creator overlap) and @onlyoyelmax (for the small-channel-finding-its-feet feel). The coding channels and TheWienerGuy seem more like algorithmic adjacency than genuine substitutes. The thing I'd actually be watching, if I were vedanshi, is whether her ~132 subs-per-video ratio holds at higher upload counts — that number is the most flattering signal in this comparison and it tends to compress as creators scale.
Common questions
Who are @vedanshi_chandanii's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Based on the scraped competitor set, the closest channels are @Bgyanfacts (9,950 subs, Indian facts shorts), @TheWienerGuy (4,970 subs, format-similar entertainment), and @Codemyhobby (4,540 subs, web-dev tutorials from Nigeria). It's a loose cluster rather than a tight niche — vedanshi only has 39 videos to her 5,150 subs, while most competitors have 100-500+ uploads. The set feels more like an audience-discovery overlap than direct topical rivalry, so "competitor" is doing some heavy lifting here.
How does @vedanshi_chandanii compare to @Codemyhobby?
They have nearly identical subscriber counts — 5,150 vs 4,540 — but radically different output. Codemyhobby has published 273 videos (crash courses on CSS, JavaScript, web design) versus vedanshi's 39. That's a ratio of about 17 subs per video for Codemyhobby vs roughly 132 for vedanshi. Codemyhobby is running the long-tail tutorial-channel playbook, where each upload bets on a search query. Vedanshi's much smaller catalog suggests either episodic content or selective publishing. They aren't really substitutes.
What channels should I watch alongside @vedanshi_chandanii?
From the scraped set, the most natural pairings are @Bgyanfacts and @onlyoyelmax. Bgyanfacts (9,950 subs, India) is the most established channel in the cluster and shows what a mature shorts-format channel looks like in a similar orbit. @onlyoyelmax (3,340 subs, 138 videos) is at an earlier stage but feels like a genuine peer working through the small-channel growth phase. The coding channels (@Codemyhobby, @doumcoding) and @TheWienerGuy are probably algorithmic adjacency rather than content overlap.
Is @vedanshi_chandanii the biggest channel in their niche?
No — @Bgyanfacts leads the visible competitor set at 9,950 subscribers, nearly double vedanshi's 5,150. But raw sub count isn't the only thing worth tracking. Vedanshi's subs-per-video ratio sits around 132, the highest in the group; Bgyanfacts is closer to 69, and @doumcoding is under 10. So while she's not the largest by audience, her individual uploads appear to be pulling harder per video. Whether that holds as she scales output is the open question.
What's the difference between @vedanshi_chandanii and similar creators?
The single most observable difference is upload economics. Vedanshi has 39 videos against 5,150 subs, while the median competitor in this set sits closer to 200+ videos. @doumcoding has 531 videos for 4,720 subs, @Codemyhobby has 273 for 4,540. That tells you the surrounding channels are running high-volume tutorial or facts playbooks. Vedanshi's catalog is roughly an order of magnitude smaller per subscriber, which usually means either selective content, a shorter time on platform, or a format that rewards quality over quantity.
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