Scan the feed
Open youtube.com/feed/channels, scroll a bit, and hit “Scan”. The extension lists the channels it sees.
My way to prune subscriptions
I run this whenever my subscriptions page gets out of hand. It only touches the tab I opened, pauses between every click, and keeps a log so I can double check what changed.
Free plan handles ten channels per run with 1.2s delays. Lifetime lifts the cap, lets you tune the delay, and keeps the last 50 run logs.
Five real steps, nothing hidden.
Open youtube.com/feed/channels, scroll a bit, and hit “Scan”. The extension lists the channels it sees.
Search or filter, deselect anything you want to keep, and confirm the final queue.
The extension clicks the unsubscribe button, waits for the popup, confirms, and logs the result.
Each channel gets a badge: idle, processing, left, or failed. You can pause or stop at any point.
Export the run to CSV (premium) or copy the text log. It lists every click and YouTube response.
Free is enough for casual pruning. Paying once is for people dealing with bigger queues.
What friends usually ask before trying it.
I run it on my main account. The delays match how I would click. If YouTube blocks a request, the run stops and shows the message so you can slow it down.
No analytics or external logs. Premium keys check in with Gumroad when you activate them and store the result locally.
Send me a note. I usually patch within a day or send a manual workaround if it needs more time.
Quick fixes for the edge cases I see the most.
Zoom out to 90% or run the browser full width. YouTube sometimes hides the unsubscribe button on narrow layouts.
Usually caused by confirmation dialogs or connection hiccups. Clear the popup and hit resume—the run continues where it left off.
Reply to your Gumroad receipt or email hoangmaths96@gmail.com. I usually sort it out same day.