Beating PewDiePie, T-Series Becomes The First YouTube Channel To Hit 100 Million Subscribers
Jyotis
The battle between T-Series and PewDiePie has begun since October 2018. However, with the impressive growth rate, T-Series finally gains victory with the persuasive result.
- PewDiePie Is No Longer The King Of YouTube ‘Cause Now Is The Time Of T-Series
- Pewdiepie's Fan Hacked Printers Around The World, Telling People To Unsubscribe T-Series
T-Series from India has just become the first YouTube channel to hit 100 million subscribers. With the achievement, it manages to beat PewDiePie whose subscriber base reaches 96 million.
In fact, Social Blade, a website that specializes in tracking statistics and analytics of social media like YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter, already predicted the result of the battle between T-Series and PewDiePie before. Accordingly, the music and film production firm in India was believed to hit the milestone of 100 million subscribers on May 21.
Although the expected date went by a couple of days ago, this YouTube channel has successfully marked its brand on the famous social media platform. Meanwhile, PewDiePie in the second position was expected to collect 100 million subscribers on June 2.
It seemingly comes as no surprise that T-Series will win in this battle. The reason behind it is so simple. In recent times, the YouTube channel of the Indian company has beaten that of PewDiePie many times. In February 2019, PewDiePie was beaten by T-Series in only some minutes. One month later, T-Series continued to beat the Swedish YouTuber for a longer time.
The battle between T-Series and PewDiePie has begun since October 2018. Before that, PewDiePie held the crown on the YouTube platform in the 5-year continuous period. However, with the impressive growth rate, T-Series finally gains victory with the persuasive result.
Right now, PewDiePie has no choice but to acknowledge his failure. He posted a music video with the title “Congratulations” on YouTube.
In an interview with The Independent, Denis Crushell who now serves as a managing director at the famous social video analytics company Tubular Labs said,