South Korea
CodingApple is a South Korea-based programming and software tutorial channel that has built a loyal following among Korean-speaking developers through a deliberately casual, humor-laced approach to technical education.
Total Followers +0.7%
452K
Across YouTube
Primary Platform
YouTube
452K followers · 100% of audience
Engagement
2.1%
vs. 1.5% category median
Sponsorship Tier
Mid
Est. — / IG post
| Platform | Followers | 30d Growth | Engagement | Posts / wk | Last upload |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| YouTube | 452,000 | +3K | 2.1% | 0.9 | 6 days ago |
| Window | YouTube | Combined | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Last 7 days | +994 +0.2% | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | +994 |
| Last 30 days | +3K +0.7% | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | +3K |
| Last 90 days | +12K +2.7% | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | +12K |
| Last 365 days | +12K +2.7% | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | +12K |
Daily follower snapshots from CreatorDB's longitudinal index.
CodingApple is a South Korea-based programming and software tutorial channel that has built a loyal following among Korean-speaking developers through a deliberately casual, humor-laced approach to technical education. The channel's self-description — translated roughly as 'I'm a high school girl' — is a deadpan joke typical of Korean internet culture, signaling immediately that this is not a dry, corporate coding channel. Beyond YouTube, the creator operates codingapple.com, a paid course platform covering web development and related skills, which positions the channel as a genuine educational business rather than a purely ad-supported media play. Content ranges from practical programming tutorials to quick-take commentary on tech news, with recent examples including riffs on a bloated Chrome update and the rumored shutdown of Baekjoon, a well-known Korean algorithm practice platform.
The audience skews sharply male and spans a wider age range than most youth-oriented tech channels, with meaningful representation from the 25–44 bracket — suggesting the channel attracts working developers and career-changers alongside students. Geographic concentration in South Korea exceeds 96%, making this a deeply domestic Korean-language property rather than a multilingual or globally distributed one. Engagement sits comfortably above the category baseline, a signal that the blend of utility and comedic tone creates genuine retention. With no heavy reliance on brand sponsorships visible in the data, the channel's monetization appears course-driven, which gives it unusual independence and credibility within the Korean developer education space — a positioning that should appeal to domestic tech-sector brands or developer-tool companies seeking an audience with real practitioner intent.
codingapple reaches an audience concentrated in South Korea primarily through YouTube, and is best activated via long-form YouTube integrations. As a tech creator they map naturally to brands targeting that space. Engagement on YouTube runs around 2.1%, pointing to an audience suited to category-relevant, mid-funnel brand campaigns rather than pure-reach buys.
Benchmark estimates for a creator at @codingapple's tier (Mid, 452K combined followers, South Korea). Pulled from CreatorDB's category benchmarks.
The CreatorDB Agency runs end-to-end influencer campaigns globally — shortlisting, outreach, contracting, and performance reporting. Talk to our team about building a campaign around creators in this niche.
The phrase translates to "I am a high school girl," and it's a deliberate running joke for a channel whose audience is overwhelmingly adult and male. Leaning into absurdist self-description is part of codingapple's comedic brand — the humor signals that the channel takes programming seriously but doesn't take itself too seriously.
codingapple posted a video titled "Baekjoon has ended its service," using the kind of alarming headline that would immediately stop any Korean developer mid-scroll, since Baekjoon is one of the most widely used algorithm judge platforms in South Korea. The channel regularly frames tech news this way to hook its core audience of Korean coders and CS students.
Yes — the YouTube bio links directly to codingapple.com, which is the channel's dedicated course platform separate from YouTube. Running an owned site alongside a YouTube presence lets codingapple offer structured, paid programming courses that go deeper than short-form videos allow.
codingapple posted a video titled "The YouTuber who got a shout-out from Shin Chang-seop," pointing to a moment where the well-known Korean entertainer referenced the channel. A celebrity crossover is a major visibility event for a niche tech channel, pulling in viewers who would never normally seek out programming content.
#chatgpt is one of codingapple's most consistently used hashtags, and AI topics sit alongside web development and software tutorials as a core content pillar. The channel covers practical implications of AI for developers rather than just surface-level explainers, which fits its audience of working Korean engineers and students.
It's a humor-driven piece that wraps a tech or coding concept inside an absurdist premise — a format codingapple uses regularly to make programming topics watchable for a wider audience. The channel blends genuine developer content with jokes and pop-culture angles, which explains why its engagement runs above the category average.
Yes, the channel publishes almost entirely in Korean — over 96% of its audience is based in South Korea, making it one of the most domestically concentrated programming channels in its tier on YouTube. If you're looking for Korean-language coding tutorials or Korean tech commentary, it's one of the larger dedicated options available.
The channel covers web development, software engineering concepts, and general coding tutorials, mixed with tech news commentary like a recent video on Chrome's bloated update size. The content targets working developers and university-level CS students rather than complete beginners, with a tone that keeps things entertaining alongside the technical material.
#shorts is the channel's most-used hashtag, so Shorts are a central part of the strategy alongside longer tutorials. The format split lets codingapple deliver quick tech reactions and jokes while still publishing structured educational content for viewers who want deeper programming coverage.
With over 450,000 YouTube subscribers drawn almost entirely from South Korea, codingapple sits in the Mid tier globally but holds a strong niche position within Korean-language tech and coding content specifically. Its engagement runs above the category median, suggesting the audience is genuinely active rather than passively subscribed.
Stats (followers, engagement, audience demographics, growth) are pulled live from the CreatorDB API covering YouTube, Instagram and TikTok. Bio and FAQ content is AI-assisted; news items are sourced from cited public press at generation time. Read the full methodology →
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@codingapple · YouTube
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