{"id":92560,"date":"2026-06-09T13:09:37","date_gmt":"2026-06-09T09:39:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/pixflow.net\/blog\/?p=92560"},"modified":"2026-06-09T13:09:37","modified_gmt":"2026-06-09T09:39:37","slug":"how-faceless-channel-creators-earn-without-adsense","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/pixflow.net\/blog\/how-faceless-channel-creators-earn-without-adsense\/","title":{"rendered":"The Faceless Funnel: How 8 Faceless Channel Creators Earn Without Adsense"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"wpb-content-wrapper\"><p>[vc_row css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1734342908250{margin-top: 125px !important;}&#8221;][vc_column][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1780996241373{margin-bottom: 25px !important;}&#8221;]<span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">As an aspiring author and a committed procrastinator, I spent years writing unfinished short stories and collecting more story ideas than I could ever use. Most never made it into the wild, and the ones that did launched to an audience of nobody.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">That changed in September 2022, when I first came across Midjourney, one of the earliest text-to-image models that produced images good enough to impress rather than amuse. By December I was hooked, spending hours prompting and building a large collection of images across different aesthetics. Much like my writing, these images needed an outlet.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">In early January 2023 I created my TikTok page, Raivolution, nicknamed Beboo. The name is a pun on &#8220;revolution&#8221; plus AI, and a small revolution is roughly what it became. By my third post I had passed 230,000 views. By my tenth I was over 2 million. AI images were clearly a content format ready to take social media by storm, and my growth suggested I was near the front of the wave.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">I qualified for TikTok&#8217;s Creator Rewards Program (the platform&#8217;s equivalent of YouTube AdSense) within a week by crossing 10,000 followers. My earnings were pitiful. Despite consistently posting videos that broke a million views, I didn&#8217;t come close to a real income until months later, when I changed how I thought about monetisation entirely.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">This article is about that shift. It covers the monetisation approach faceless channel creators are using to diversify their income and stop living at the mercy of a platform&#8217;s payout program. But first, some groundwork.<\/span>[\/vc_custom_heading][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1734342908250{margin-top: 125px !important;}&#8221;][vc_column][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;&#8221; el_id=&#8221;What is a faceless channel&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h2><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">What is a faceless channel?<\/span><\/h2>\n<p>[\/vc_custom_heading][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1780996285382{margin-bottom: 25px !important;}&#8221;]<span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">A faceless channel is exactly what it sounds like. The creator never appears on camera. The content is carried by voiceovers, AI-generated visuals, stock footage, animation, or on-screen text, and the audience builds a relationship with the content rather than a personality.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The format covers a wide range. Some faceless channels are traditional: cooking videos shot over the shoulder, gameplay walkthroughs, software tutorials recorded as screen captures. Others are fully automated: AI-narrated horror stories, animated explainers, ambient music streams, AI-generated documentary shorts. When most people talk about faceless channels today, they usually mean the automated, AI-assisted kind.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Those AI-driven channels have taken over the space for a simple reason. Production cost has collapsed. Work that once needed a stock footage subscription, a voice actor, and an editor can now be done by one person with a ChatGPT subscription, an image generator, an AI voice tool, and a basic editing app. A channel that would have required a small team two years ago can now run from a bedroom on a budget no greater than $100.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The second shift is repeatability. Once a format works, AI tools let you produce it again and again without much manual lift, which is why platforms have appeared that handle the entire pipeline from script to finished video. That automation is why I eventually built<\/span><a href=\"http:\/\/taletok.io\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"> <span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Taletok.io<\/span><\/a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, after spending hundreds of hours assembling my own faceless videos by hand.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The result is a gold rush. Faceless channels are thriving in formats that barely existed two years ago: modern influencers traveling into the past, outlandish timelapse renovations, dramatised Reddit threads, interactive horror stories and an infinite amount more. If you can prompt it, it\u2019s likely someone has already built a channel around it.<\/span>[\/vc_custom_heading][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1734342908250{margin-top: 125px !important;}&#8221;][vc_column][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;&#8221; el_id=&#8221;How are faceless AI channels earning&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h2>How are faceless AI channels earning?<\/h2>\n<p>[\/vc_custom_heading][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1780996392657{margin-bottom: 25px !important;}&#8221;]<span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Most articles about faceless monetisation fixate on one stream: AdSense, or its cousins like TikTok&#8217;s Creator Rewards Program and Instagram&#8217;s Reels bonuses. That is only one slice of how the smartest creators actually earn. Here is the wider picture.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Platform payouts.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> The default path everyone reaches for first, and the weakest stream for most faceless creators. As I found out, you can post million-view videos for months and still earn a rounding error. Ad revenue rewards long watch time, which favours long-form YouTube over short-form virality, so short-form faceless creators who treat payouts as their main income are leaving most of their value on the table.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Brand partnerships and sponsorships.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> Once a channel reaches a certain size, brands start reaching out. The catch is that faceless channels usually command lower rates than personality-led ones, because brands pay for the trust a recognisable face carries. Niche channels in finance, fitness, or gaming can still land good deals, but it is rarely the main engine.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Affiliate marketing.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> Linking to products in descriptions and bios for a commission. This works well for tutorial-adjacent niches, but purely entertainment-focused channels often struggle to find relevant products to promote.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Flipping accounts.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> A grey-area but real practice where operators grow faceless accounts and sell them on. The platform-compliance risk makes this hard to recommend, but it exists and is worth being aware of.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Digital products and physical merchandise.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> This is the focus of the rest of the article. It is the method the smartest faceless creators are quietly building their income around, and it is almost entirely missing from the standard monetisation guides.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">There is one more reason to take this seriously. Platform payouts are fragile. YouTube has revised its stance on AI-generated and &#8220;mass-produced&#8221; content more than once in the past two years, and reserves the right to demonetise channels it judges inauthentic. TikTok has changed its Creator Rewards payout structure repeatedly. Instagram has scaled its bonuses back. Most creators accept this risk simply because they are unaware of any alternative.\u00a0 The funnel below is about owning the stream of income instead.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">A note on platform reliance: the YouTube demonetisation history alone should make every faceless creator nervous about putting all their eggs in the AdSense basket. YouTube has shifted its monetisation policies around AI-generated content multiple times in the past two years, and the platform reserves the right to demonetise channels it deems &#8220;mass-produced&#8221; or &#8220;inauthentic.&#8221; TikTok&#8217;s Creator Rewards Program has changed payout structures repeatedly since launch. Instagram pays bonuses inconsistently and has scaled them back significantly. Platform payouts are a rented house. Digital products are owned land.<\/span>[\/vc_custom_heading][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1734342908250{margin-top: 125px !important;}&#8221;][vc_column][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;&#8221; el_id=&#8221;The monetisation method smart faceless channel creators are using with 8 real examples&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h2>The monetisation method smart faceless channel creators are using, with 8 real examples:<\/h2>\n<p>[\/vc_custom_heading][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1780996641022{margin-bottom: 25px !important;}&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h3><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">What these creators are actually selling<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><br \/>\n<\/span><\/h3>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">From the earliest days of commerce, selling information has been one of the most stable and profitable trades. That is even truer in the information age, and the creators below have understood it well. Their products vary, from Skool communities and Etsy guides to physical merchandise and Patreon subscriptions, but the logic is the same. They have stepped out of the payout queue and built a funnel that puts buying power back in their own hands.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Two advantages make this work.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Leverage<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">. You write the guide or record the walkthrough once, then funnel viewers to it indefinitely. Create it a single time, sell it without limit.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Trust<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">. Viewers who follow you already trust you, and some actively want to support you. A product that lets them into your creative process gives them something they value and rewards you at the same time.<\/span>[\/vc_custom_heading][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1734342908250{margin-top: 125px !important;}&#8221;][vc_column][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;&#8221; el_id=&#8221;The funnel structure that makes it all possible&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h2>The funnel structure that makes it all possible<\/h2>\n<p>[\/vc_custom_heading][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1780996703189{margin-bottom: 25px !important;}&#8221;]<span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Viewers arriving at these channels are almost always top of funnel, a sales term for someone who does not yet know your brand or product. The days of videos performing on the strength of your existing subscribers are gone. The explore and For You feeds now drive nearly all viewership. On my own page, anything above roughly 10,000 views came over 96% from the For You feed, which means almost every viewer was meeting me for the first time. You cannot open with the product. You have to earn the relationship first.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The faceless funnel comes down to three elements.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Content as the hook.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> Your content is the lure. It has to stand on its own as something worth watching and must never feel like an advertisement.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Demonstrated value.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> This sits inside the content, because the content is the proof. A viewer who enjoys what you made naturally starts wondering how you made it, which opens a knowledge gap your product can fill.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Call to action.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> Usually a light touch at the end of the video, something as simple as &#8220;creation guide in bio,&#8221; often echoed in the description. The lighter the better, until the audience is warm.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Here is how that plays out across eight real creators, starting with my own page.<\/span>[\/vc_custom_heading][px_single_image_box px_image_box_position=&#8221;px_image_box_position_center&#8221; px_image_width_option=&#8221;true&#8221; px_image_url=&#8221;92561&#8243; px_image_url_webp=&#8221;92561&#8243; px_image_width=&#8221;700px&#8221;][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1734342908250{margin-top: 125px !important;}&#8221;][vc_column][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;&#8221; el_id=&#8221;Nested Sequence vs Adjustment Layer vs Multicam Which One to Use&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h2>1. Beboo (@raivolution) &#8211; Tiktok<\/h2>\n<p>[\/vc_custom_heading][px_single_image_box px_image_box_position=&#8221;px_image_box_position_center&#8221; px_image_width_option=&#8221;true&#8221; px_image_url=&#8221;92562&#8243; px_image_url_webp=&#8221;92562&#8243; px_image_width=&#8221;700px&#8221;][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1780996882423{margin-bottom: 25px !important;}&#8221;]<span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">For my first few months as a monetised creator, I earned almost nothing relative to my views. Million-view videos were routine, I posted several times a week, and a strong month of platform payouts came to maybe $150. It was not zero, but for the work involved, often hours per post since I used AI only for the images and wrote the stories myself, the reward was negligible. It was bearable only because I was enjoying it.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Everything changed when I moved to a guides model. Across nearly every post, I was getting comments asking how I made the videos, or how I came up with the story ideas, or both. The demand was sitting right there in my notifications.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">I made three guides. Two matched my most popular formats: an AI Anime Creation Guide that I promoted on anime posts, and an AI Movie Creation Guide for my movie-idea posts. Each took about three hours to write and laid out the exact tools and workflows behind that style of content. They were not about growing a channel, which is my focus now, but about the content itself. I priced both at $8. The third was an Idea Creation Guide covering my process for writing the stories, with a walkthrough of some of my best posts and the anime and movie prompts thrown in as a bonus. That one sold for $13.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">I started selling in late May. At the peak, posting around three times a week, I would see two to four sales a day, and over ten when a post did especially well. That worked out to roughly $600 a month in extra income, which is notable given that I had slowed my posting right down and had not yet tightened the funnel. I left plenty on the table by forgetting a call to action on many of my best-performing posts.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">In funnel terms, here is what I was running:<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Content as the hook.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> AI-illustrated short stories, posted three to four times a week. The visuals were the differentiator. Most short-form storytelling at the time was either stock footage with a voiceover or static-image slideshow, and the AI imagery cut through because it felt unfamiliar and visually rich. The stories themselves were the second hook layer.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Demonstrated value.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> Every post showed exactly what the guides taught. Viewers who watched one of my anime short stories were watching the output of the workflow they could buy. The proof of value sat inside the content, which is why guide sales were so directly correlated with post quality. Strong posts sold guides. Weak posts did not.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Call to action.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> A simple line on the relevant posts, usually some version of &#8220;creation guide in bio,&#8221; as the final slide, with the same line repeated in the description. Soft, not pushy. When I forgot to add it on high-performing posts, sales were noticeably lower for those videos, which taught me how much even a one-line CTA mattered.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The reason this worked at scale was that the funnel matched the audience. People watching AI-illustrated stories were people interested in AI-illustrated stories. Selling them a guide on how to make AI-illustrated stories aligned the curiosity with the product. The lesson I would learn watching other creators do this well, and badly, came directly from running it on myself first.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Watching the funnel work on my own page is also what convinced me there was a tool worth building. After I slowed down on Beboo, I went on to build <\/span><a href=\"https:\/\/taletok.io\/youtube-automation\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Taletok<\/span><\/a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, a platform that creates and automates trending faceless channel formats so creators can focus on the funnel rather than the production.\u00a0<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><br \/>\n<\/span>[\/vc_custom_heading][px_single_image_box px_image_box_position=&#8221;px_image_box_position_center&#8221; px_image_width_option=&#8221;true&#8221; px_image_url=&#8221;92563&#8243; px_image_url_webp=&#8221;92563&#8243; px_image_width=&#8221;700px&#8221;][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1734342908250{margin-top: 125px !important;}&#8221;][vc_column][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;&#8221; el_id=&#8221;Nested Sequence vs Adjustment Layer vs Multicam Which One to Use&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h2>2. Top100_real (@Top100_real) &#8211; Tiktok<\/h2>\n<p>[\/vc_custom_heading][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1780997016837{margin-bottom: 25px !important;}&#8221;]<span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">A newer entrant that has taken the TikTok algorithm by storm. With only 22 posts, this channel has gathered over 160,000 followers and 19 million likes, with a best-performing video near 40 million views.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The content is expertly edited movie and TV scenes deepfaked with popular cultural figures, from iShowSpeed and Kai Cenat to Walter White, LeBron James, and Elon Musk. The editing and scripting are excellent, with what I would estimate at well over ten hours of work per post, which explains the low post count alongside the enormous reach.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Content as the hook.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> The format is an evergreen loop of shock, comedy, and familiarity. It takes trending figures and cultural moments and folds them into recognisable media with a surprising or funny spin, all carried by sharp editing. The &#8220;2025 Meme Rewind,&#8221; a Squid Game parody stacked with the year&#8217;s biggest meme figures, pulled close to 20 million views on its own.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Demonstrated value.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> The sheer quality sells the product for him. When I first found the page, the content was good enough that I bought his guide on the spot, purely to understand how it was made. A perfect illustration of this step of the funnel.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Call to action.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> He goes lighter than almost anyone. There is no CTA in the videos at all. Instead the bio carries the offer as its single focus. During my own time on the platform I found that around 60% of people who watch a post will tap through to the profile, which means a creator at his view counts is sending an enormous volume of warm traffic to that one link.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">He started with a single guide at $20 and has since added tiers. I will not put a revenue figure on it, because any number I could calculate from public data would be guesswork, but the structure speaks for itself. A creator built and monetised a large audience from a bedroom, using AI tools that cost well under $100 a month, and there is every reason to think the product dwarfs whatever the platform pays him.<\/span>[\/vc_custom_heading][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1734342908250{margin-top: 125px !important;}&#8221;][vc_column][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h2>3. Lucamaxiim (@lucamaxiim) &#8211; Instagram<\/h2>\n<p>[\/vc_custom_heading][px_single_image_box px_image_box_position=&#8221;px_image_box_position_center&#8221; px_image_width_option=&#8221;true&#8221; px_image_url=&#8221;92564&#8243; px_image_url_webp=&#8221;92564&#8243; px_image_width=&#8221;700px&#8221;][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1780997126420{margin-bottom: 25px !important;}&#8221;]<span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">My favourite of the group, and the hardest to summarise. Luca Maxim is a Georgian musician and fashion designer who does appear on camera in some content, but his real wedge is a set of faceless reels built on a strict format. Each one uses a stylised visual aesthetic, often a video game look like GTA V, PS2-era graphics, or Fortnite, which is itself a hook. He narrates a winding, very niche scenario that rewards heavy internet and meme literacy, which neatly filters the audience down to his ideal customer. A script might open with a line like &#8220;it&#8217;s hard being a rage baiter,&#8221; spiral into something absurd and funny, then land on the product.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">What makes him different is that the product comes first and the content is reverse-engineered from it. He sells apparel through his brand Children of Khan, built around niche meme phrases like &#8220;Elite Ball Knowledge.&#8221; Where the others stumbled onto a format and then found something to sell, his whole strategy is a product dressed up as meme-able video.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Content as the hook.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> The stylised game aesthetics grab anyone who identifies with the look, so there is already heavy overlap between viewer and customer before a word is spoken. It is a masterclass in audience selection.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Demonstrated value.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> Unusually, the value here is comedic rather than technical. Because he sells merch rather than a tutorial, he seeds the product into the script and builds the story around it. A post promoting the Elite Ball Knowledge polo resolves with a punchline that folds the product into the joke, so the CTA lands as a payoff rather than a pitch.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Call to action.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> He is one of the few who places the CTA directly in the content, and he has made it work so well that viewers stay for the comedy and even race to guess which item he is promoting in the comments before the video ends.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">He does not stop at merch. He also sells a course on creating content like his, called<\/span><a href=\"https:\/\/www.eliteballknowledge.ai\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"> <span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Elite Ball Knowledge<\/span><\/a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, priced at $197, which teaches building a brand voice and directing AI video at scale. With his apparel page noting over 10,000 customers, items starting around $60, and a following past 460,000, it is safe to say the funnel earns him well beyond a living. This is the most complete use of the faceless funnel I have come across.<\/span>[\/vc_custom_heading][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1734342908250{margin-top: 125px !important;}&#8221;][vc_column][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;&#8221; el_id=&#8221;Nested Sequence vs Adjustment Layer vs Multicam Which One to Use&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h2>4. Aze Alter (AzeAlter) &#8211; Instagram \/ YouTube<\/h2>\n<p>[\/vc_custom_heading][px_single_image_box px_image_box_position=&#8221;px_image_box_position_center&#8221; px_image_width_option=&#8221;true&#8221; px_image_url=&#8221;92565&#8243; px_image_url_webp=&#8221;92565&#8243; px_image_width=&#8221;700px&#8221;][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1780997191040{margin-bottom: 25px !important;}&#8221;]<span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Aze Alter, a Canadian filmmaker, makes longer-form dystopian science fiction built with AI tools like Runway, Luma, and Kling. His work is a serialised exploration of bleak futuristic worlds, most notably the Red Rainbow and Biolands series, and he sells merchandise tied to those worlds.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Content as the hook.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> His visual style stands out immediately. The dystopian imagery and unsettling characters grab attention, and even at longer runtimes he holds viewers with genuinely intriguing narratives. I am a fan of the ongoing series myself.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Demonstrated value.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> His distinctive ability to craft long AI narratives would make an obvious workflow guide, which he does not sell. Instead, the consistency and strangeness of his world create a visual moat, and he funnels that interest toward his apparel store,<\/span><a href=\"https:\/\/redrainbow.store\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"> <span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Red Rainbow<\/span><\/a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, where he sells items from the universe he has built.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Call to action.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> He keeps it soft, with no CTA inside the content and links only at the top of his YouTube descriptions and in his bio. That fits narrative-first content, where an in-video pitch would feel intrusive. The lesson is to match the CTA to the content type before anything else.<\/span>[\/vc_custom_heading][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1734342908250{margin-top: 125px !important;}&#8221;][vc_column][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;&#8221; el_id=&#8221;Nested Sequence vs Adjustment Layer vs Multicam Which One to Use&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h2>5. Gods Ares AI (@Godsaresai) &#8211; Instagram \/ Tiktok<\/h2>\n<p>[\/vc_custom_heading][px_single_image_box px_image_box_position=&#8221;px_image_box_position_center&#8221; px_image_width_option=&#8221;true&#8221; px_image_url=&#8221;92566&#8243; px_image_url_webp=&#8221;92566&#8243; px_image_width=&#8221;700px&#8221;][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1780997279597{margin-bottom: 25px !important;}&#8221;]<span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">A heavy hitter on the funnel. This creator makes dramatic, nonsensical narratives starring real footballers, almost always Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi, with Messi frequently cast as a small child, often Ronaldo&#8217;s son, getting abducted by villains like Kylian Mbapp\u00e9. The premises are ridiculous, but the visual quality and editing are excellent, only a step behind Top100_real.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Content as the hook.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> Possibly the best in the group at this. It draws on the biggest sport in the world and its most famous faces, which guarantees a vast potential audience, then holds them with brash, over-the-top storylines. I have caught myself sharing these with football-fan friends. The absurdity is recognisable and fully embraced, which gives the content huge sharing and rewatch value.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Demonstrated value.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> Viewers are drawn in by the quality of the deepfakes and editing, which makes it easy to point them toward a workflow tutorial, and that is exactly what the channel sells.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Call to action.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> A bio link to a Skool community teaching the workflow. With over 4,800 members and a $19 a month tier, even a conservative paid-conversion estimate of 7% would imply meaningful recurring monthly revenue, on the order of several thousand dollars, with the headline figure depending on how many members sit on the paid plan.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The four standout channels above share something: a high level of manual craft. None is riding a copy-paste trend, which gives each a stronger moat in its niche. The next three operate in more crowded, standardised formats with plenty of competitors, but they still use the funnel well.<\/span>[\/vc_custom_heading][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1734342908250{margin-top: 125px !important;}&#8221;][vc_column][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;&#8221; el_id=&#8221;Nested Sequence vs Adjustment Layer vs Multicam Which One to Use&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h2>6. Mr_datavisuals (@mrdata_visuals) &#8211; Instagram<\/h2>\n<p>[\/vc_custom_heading][px_single_image_box px_image_box_position=&#8221;px_image_box_position_center&#8221; px_image_width_option=&#8221;true&#8221; px_image_url=&#8221;92567&#8243; px_image_url_webp=&#8221;92567&#8243; px_image_width=&#8221;700px&#8221;][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1780997361746{margin-bottom: 25px !important;}&#8221;]<span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">This channel works in the &#8220;what if&#8221; and historical-hypothetical space, with one crucial twist: a recurring central character, a translucent anatomical skeleton, that anchors every video. The underlying format is otherwise standard AI environments, AI voiceover, and simple cuts, but the consistent character is the differentiator.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Content as the hook.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> The skeleton is the reason it works. The data-visualisation short is a saturated format with dozens of near-identical competitors, but viewers recognise a Mr_datavisuals video instantly from the thumbnail. In a crowded niche, visual consistency beats novelty.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Demonstrated value.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> The character becomes its own curiosity hook. Viewers do not just want to know how the video was made, they want to know how to build a recurring character of their own, which is a sharper and more sellable question than generic AI editing.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Call to action.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> A bio link to a Gumroad course at $79.99. The higher price reflects a specific, differentiated technique rather than a broad beginner course.<\/span>[\/vc_custom_heading][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1734342908250{margin-top: 125px !important;}&#8221;][vc_column][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;&#8221; el_id=&#8221;Nested Sequence vs Adjustment Layer vs Multicam Which One to Use&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h2>7. RRG_trading (@rrg_trading) &#8211; Instagram<\/h2>\n<p>[\/vc_custom_heading][px_single_image_box px_image_box_position=&#8221;px_image_box_position_center&#8221; px_image_width_option=&#8221;true&#8221; px_image_url=&#8221;92568&#8243; px_image_url_webp=&#8221;92568&#8243; px_image_width=&#8221;700px&#8221;][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1780997429346{margin-bottom: 25px !important;}&#8221;]<span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Included because it shows what happens when the funnel misfires. RRG_trading makes anthropomorphic AI trading candlestick characters in dramatised, NSFW-adjacent scenarios full of exaggerated bodies and soap-opera plots of drama and betrayal. The visuals are loud and the shock value pulls big numbers.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Content as the hook.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> Strong. Absurd anthropomorphised trading candlesticks are novel, and the algorithm rewards the shock value.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Demonstrated value.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> This is where it breaks. Viewers stick around for the visual spectacle, so their curiosity is about the content style, the characters, and the workflow. The natural product would be a creation tutorial. Instead the channel sells trading education, with a free YouTube course feeding a $59 Gumroad course.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Call to action.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> A bio link to either the free course or the paid product. The CTA mechanics are fine, but there is a real disconnect between what the audience came for, entertainment, and what it is being sold, forex strategy. A viewer hooked by candlestick drama is rarely a viewer who wants to learn to trade, so conversion almost certainly suffers.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">This is the most important lesson in the article. Your product has to match the curiosity your content creates. RRG_trading has the audience and the reach, but it is selling the wrong thing to the right people.<\/span>[\/vc_custom_heading][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1734342908250{margin-top: 125px !important;}&#8221;][vc_column][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h2>8. HorrorFlix (@horrorflix) &#8211; Tiktok<\/h2>\n<p>[\/vc_custom_heading][px_single_image_box px_image_box_position=&#8221;px_image_box_position_center&#8221; px_image_width_option=&#8221;true&#8221; px_image_url=&#8221;92569&#8243; px_image_url_webp=&#8221;92569&#8243; px_image_width=&#8221;700px&#8221;][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1780997541164{margin-bottom: 25px !important;}&#8221;]<span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">A creator working in the booming liminal horror and choose-your-path space. @horrorflix produces eerie atmospheric AI shorts that prompt viewers to make a choice as the story unfolds, do you open the door or run, with consequences that play out across the series. What sets the channel apart from the dozens of similar accounts that have appeared in the past year is the recurring central character, a tall unsettling figure that anchors every video and gives the channel a visual identity competitors lack.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Content as the hook.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> Interactivity is the first hook. Viewers do not watch passively, they comment their choices, which lifts engagement and pushes the content further in the algorithm. The tall guy is the second hook and the harder one to replicate. Most liminal horror channels rely on generic AI-generated environments and shift visual styles between videos, which makes them interchangeable. @horrorflix has a recognisable character that viewers anticipate seeing, which turns one-off virality into a returning audience. In a crowded niche, character branding does the work that production budget cannot.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Demonstrated value.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> Technical curiosity runs high in the comments. People want to know how the look is achieved, how the choose-your-path mechanic is structured, and how the character is kept consistent across videos. That last point is the same problem Mr_datavisuals solved with his skeleton, and it is the value gap most aspiring liminal horror creators would pay to bridge.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>Call to action.<\/b><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> This is where @horrorflix is taking the most interesting bet of the group. Rather than monetising the audience through guides or workflows, the creator is building a physical merchandise brand around the tall guy character, with a store at tallguy.store currently in development. That is a longer monetisation runway than slapping a Gumroad guide in the bio, but it is also a much bigger ceiling. Aze Alter and Luca Maxim both demonstrate that character-led merchandise from a faceless channel can outearn any digital product when the character itself becomes the brand.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">It is worth pausing on what this signals. The creator could already be selling a workflow guide and probably making decent monthly income from it. Choosing to build a merchandise brand instead is a bet on the audience being a community rather than a customer base, and on the character being more valuable as a piece of IP than as a tutorial subject. Whether that bet pays off will depend on execution, but the strategic instinct is the same one that turned Luca Maxim&#8217;s memes into an apparel business doing real volume. The faceless funnel does not have to end at a digital product. For creators with a strong visual identity, it can be the foundation of an entire brand. <\/span>[\/vc_custom_heading][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1734342908250{margin-top: 125px !important;}&#8221;][vc_column][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;&#8221; el_id=&#8221;What the faceless funnel actually teaches you&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h2>What the faceless funnel actually teaches you<\/h2>\n<p>[\/vc_custom_heading][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1780997583778{margin-bottom: 25px !important;}&#8221;]<span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Across all eight creators, a few patterns hold.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The strongest moats belong to the creators doing something nobody else is doing. Luca Maxim with merch-first storytelling, Aze Alter with a proprietary universe, Top100_real with deepfake editing quality. They did not jump on a trend, they became one. If you want to see more examples of faceless creators who built rather than borrowed, I keep a running list of the<\/span><a href=\"https:\/\/taletok.io\/blog\/best-faceless-youtube-channels\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"> <span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">best faceless YouTube channels<\/span><\/a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> operating today.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Creators in saturated formats survive on branding. Mr_datavisuals would vanish without the skeleton. HorrorFlix would be one of hundreds of analog-horror accounts without the interactive mechanic.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The product has to match the curiosity. RRG_trading is the cautionary case. The funnels that convert best sell the exact thing the audience is already wondering about while it watches.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">And the pattern that matters most: every one of these creators treats platform payouts as a bonus, not the engine. AdSense, Creator Rewards, Reels bonuses, all of it sits on top of the real income, which comes from the funnel underneath.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">If you are building a faceless channel right now and your plan is to wait for payout eligibility, you are playing the wrong game. The creators turning this niche into a full-time income worked out long ago that the audience is the asset, the platform is a rented storefront, and real ownership only comes from selling something your audience can buy from you directly.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Build the channel. Build the funnel beneath it. Do not wait for a platform to decide what you are worth.<\/span>[\/vc_custom_heading][\/vc_column][\/vc_row]<\/p>\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>[vc_row css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1734342908250{margin-top: 125px !important;}&#8221;][vc_column][vc_custom_heading css=&#8221;.vc_custom_1780996241373{margin-bottom: 25px !important;}&#8221;]As an aspiring author and a committed procrastinator, I spent years writing unfinished short stories and collecting more story ideas than I could ever use. Most never made it into the wild, and the ones that did launched to an audience of nobody. That changed in September 2022, when [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":92570,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[70],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-92560","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-filmmaking"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/pixflow.net\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/92560","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/pixflow.net\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/pixflow.net\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pixflow.net\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pixflow.net\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=92560"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/pixflow.net\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/92560\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":92571,"href":"https:\/\/pixflow.net\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/92560\/revisions\/92571"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pixflow.net\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/92570"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/pixflow.net\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=92560"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pixflow.net\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=92560"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pixflow.net\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=92560"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}