u/DependentKing698

Drop your workflow below and I’ll hook you up with free YouTube subtitle credits + tips

Hey guys! I built a tool to solve the YouTube transcript pain I’ve been complaining about lately, and I want to test it with real workflows.

I know how tedious it is to handle subtitles one-by-one, so here’s the deal:
Drop a comment below with how you use YouTube transcripts (language learning, SEO, repurposing, etc.) and what you’re struggling with.

I’ll reply to everyone with:
✅ Free credits to download an entire playlist’s subtitles in bulk
✅ A quick tip on how to use the tool for your specific workflow

The tool works for playlists, whole channels, even single videos — and you can make study/flash cards too. Let’s test it together and make it better!

The platform is ytvidhub.com if you want to check it out in advance.

Let’s go👇

reddit.com
u/DependentKing698 — 15 hours ago

Got tired of extracting YouTube transcripts one video at a time?

If you’re a language learner, researcher, blogger, creator, or SEO/content person — how do you currently handle transcripts when you’re working with tons of videos at once? I’d love to hear what’s been working for you.

Now is my story here.....

I’ve been hitting the same wall over and over lately:

All those YouTube transcript tools work okay for one video…
but they completely die on you when you’re working with playlists, whole channels, podcast archives, or any kind of big research project.

I use YouTube for basically everything right now:

  • learning new stuff
  • researching podcasts
  • repurposing content
  • digging into SEO keywords
  • summarizing long interviews

And copying transcripts one by one? It’s so frustrating. I swear half my day was just pausing, copying, and pasting subtitles.

It’s extra bad when I’m working with:

  • TED talk playlists
  • full podcast back catalogs
  • huge educational channels
  • creator research deep dives

So I ended up building a little workflow just for myself to make this suck less. Now I can:

  • process entire playlists at once
  • batch pull subtitles in one go
  • auto-generate quick summaries
  • turn videos into study/research notes

The game-changer? It works for whole playlists, not just one random video.

I’m still tweaking it, so I’m looking for people who actually deal with high-volume YouTube work to test it out and tell me what works (and what doesn’t).

reddit.com
u/DependentKing698 — 15 hours ago
▲ 0 r/IELTS

Anyone else tired of copying YouTube transcripts one video at a time?

I’ve been studying for IELTS using YouTube playlists lately, and I’ve noticed something: most of the “friction” isn’t in the listening practice itself — it’s in managing transcripts and notes.

My old routine was a total mess:

  • Opening every video one by one
  • Copying subtitles manually to review
  • Saving notes in 10 different places
  • Losing useful phrases I wanted to practice

Once my playlists got longer, this became way too time-consuming.

I’ve been experimenting with a new personal system to streamline this — processing full playlists, getting transcripts in bulk, and organizing notes into review cards. It’s made going back over long listening videos way easier.

Curious how other people here handle transcript and note-taking for YouTube-based IELTS practice. Any hacks or workflows you swear by?

reddit.com
u/DependentKing698 — 16 hours ago

The hardest part of learning from YouTube wasn’t the videos

I’ve been using YouTube playlists (IELTS listening, TED Talks, podcasts) as my main way to study English lately, and I’ve hit a familiar wall:

The studying itself is fine — but managing transcripts, notes, and useful phrases is so tedious.

My old routine was a mess: opening every video individually, copying subtitles by hand, saving notes all over the place, and losing good lines I wanted to review.

I’ve been trying to build a better system for myself to handle full playlists at once: getting transcripts, quick summaries, and organized review cards in one go. It’s made reviewing long videos way easier.

I know a lot of people here use YouTube for language learning too — how do you guys handle transcripts and notes?

reddit.com
u/DependentKing698 — 16 hours ago

Frustrating! Got 70k impressions & 4.3k clicks in 10 days — still got “Low Value Content” on AdSense review

Hey everyone, quick update on my game guide site — it’s been 7 days since I submitted AdSense, and the review result is in: still the familiar “Low Value Content” rejection.

Just to recap where we’re at, based on my GSC/GA data:

  • 69.7k impressions & 4.33k clicks in 10 days
  • Average CTR at 6.2%, average position around 6.9
  • 100% organic long-tail search traffic, no bots, no paid traffic
  • All content is original game guides/walkthroughs, written specifically for the niche

It’s a bit frustrating seeing the site grow fast but still getting the same rejection. I’m not giving up though — I’m doubling down on content updates, adding more detailed walkthroughs, and tweaking the site structure to make the value clearer.

My guess is the bar for “high-value content” has really gone up lately with how easy AI content creation is these days. AdSense reviewers are probably extra strict with niche sites to avoid generic, low-effort content.

Has anyone else here dealt with “Low Value Content” rejections on a clean, fast-growing niche site? What specific changes made the biggest difference for you? I’d love to hear your tips and what you focused on to get approved.

u/DependentKing698 — 21 hours ago

Big Mistake Alert: Avoid NSFW Games If You Want Google AdSense Approval

https://preview.redd.it/4tv0x843gu1h1.png?width=2534&format=png&auto=webp&s=1eef8f4add54995694c4025a83cf1434c58a36b2

Heads up for all game guide site owners!
Never create content for NSFW games if you aim for Google AdSense monetization.
AdSense has zero tolerance for adult-related game content, it will lead to review failure and account penalties directly.
Distinguish safe mainstream games and adult-oriented NSFW games clearly in advance, save yourself a lot of unnecessary troubles!

reddit.com
u/DependentKing698 — 4 days ago
▲ 10 r/Adsense

Got 33k impressions & 2.5k clicks in 3 days — can this clean niche site pass AdSense review?

Hey everyone,

Just launched a niche content site focused on games a few days ago, and the initial Google search traffic is already picking up fast.

Over the last 3 days:
- 33.1k impressions
- 2.52k clicks
- 7.6% average CTR
- Average position at 6.5

All traffic is organic search from long-tail keywords, no bots, no paid traffic. Content is 100% original guides/cheatsheets for the niche, no scraped text.

This is my first time applying for AdSense, and I’m curious — with clean traffic and solid CTR like this, what are the odds it gets approved? Any red flags I should fix before submitting?

Thanks for the feedback!

Quick update: A lot of people have asked for the site link — it's enjoy4game. I also made r/enjoy4game for new guides and feedback, just added a full walkthrough for Directive 8020.

https://preview.redd.it/eyt4ontgw91h1.png?width=2482&format=png&auto=webp&s=ceae30462682e6532313c8d876b58c101a7c5346

reddit.com
u/DependentKing698 — 7 days ago