
Last Updated: February 25, 2026 (Price & Content Verified)
Matt Par, buddy, that laptop’s gotta be hotter than an armpit stuffed in a butthole deep in Satan’s sock drawer. Not to mention the glare.
Nobody believes you’re working on that thing at the beach.
Or that the best time to start a faceless YouTube channel is right now, after 11,000+ students have already gone through your program.
So is this budget bin Michael Cera gonna lie to us the whole time, or actually give it to us straight?
Let’s find out.
Read on for Tube Accelerator reviews.
Literally all you need is a phone and a laptop and you can make a ton of money with YouTube.
Matt’s already done $10 million, and, every month, another $100,000+ trickles in – and he only works 1-3 hours a day.
Jeez, Mr. Run It Up.
For receipts, he points to millions of subscribers across 12+ channels and dozens of those stupid play-button plaques he’s always posing with – like they’re WWE title belts, or something.
What’s that?
You say you’ve never uploaded a video in your life?
Or, maybe you have a channel, but you’re stuck at one or two grand a month?
Either way, Matt’s your guy. Hell, he could transition to a girl, flip back to a dude, and rebrand as Him Kardashian. Okay?
But let’s rewind.
Inspired by a channel called Top 5, Matt creates his first faceless video at 14.
Treats it like a video game: doubles down on what works, ditches what doesn’t.
A few months later, one of his videos goes viral and racks up over 100,000 views.
He discovers the YouTube Partner Program, turns on ads, and boom – he’s at $3,000 a month.
Not bad for a broke high school student.
Matt’s ecstatic.
He’s researching, taking notes, tweaking his process.
Eventually, he hires some people to take over the grunt work.
This frees him up to start new channels in other niches.
By the time Mr. Westergren shakes his hand and hands him his diploma, he’s making $30k a month.
Matt don’t care.
Or do he???
Next comes his personal channel, Make Money Matt.
There, he starts posting tutorials on how to make money with YouTube. The ol’ “do the thing, teach the thing” play.
That leads to his first course… and suddenly, the channel explodes to $27,000 a month.

With eyes fully open to what YouTube could do – and his nostrils flared so wide you could see heaven – Matt began experimenting with different monetization strategies.
- Ad revenue
- Sponsorships
- His own digital products
- High-ticket affiliate marketing
- And eventually software, like TubeMagic AI and VidAI
Over time, things just kept leveling up.
To where, at his peak, he was pulling in anywhere from $300k to $500k in a single month.
Jesus. That’s the kinda money where your wife becomes his garage. Hawink.
Now that you know he’s qualified, Matt can help you with:
- Choosing your channel type – faceless, personal brand, or hybrid (where someone else is the face) – and locking in a topic: usually health, wealth, relationships, or tech.
- Creating content yourself, hiring a host, or slapping together stock footage; editing it; uploading it; and optimizing everything so people can actually find it.
- Driving views using his flywheel strategy, which got him 218 hours of watch time, $52,000 in ad revenue, and over $1 million in course sales – all from just one video. Sheesh.
- Monetizing before you’ve monetized. For example, pushing a high-ticket affiliate offer while waiting on that sweet YPP approval.
His Tube Mastery & Monetization course costs $997.
Need a pay plan? You can do 3 x $366 or 8 x $200.
Or you can upgrade to Tube Accelerator, his 1-on-1 mentorship program – price unknown, but if I had to guess? Somewhere in the “please don’t tell my spouse” range.
What’s the vibe? Depends who you ask.
Reddit’s mixed to negative, with complaints about false advertising and aggressive upsells.
Trustpilot tells a similar story. Jess left 1 star, said she paid $2,500 for the Tube Accelerator program, “and it was the biggest waste of money.” They just rehash what’s already available on YouTube, and Matt’s MIA on the live calls. “Biggest scam,” she warned. “Don’t waste your money.”
Nothing on BBB.
Meanwhile, blogs are mostly positive – especially the ones with affiliate links.
Honestly?
I came in ready to call bullshit by paragraph two.
But homeboy kept it pretty real. Mostly facts. Surprisingly practical.
And yeah, YouTube automation’s probably pretty saturated by now. What isn’t?
If you’re ready to compete, I say go for it. Maybe just find someone not named Matt Par to learn from.
Q&A
Q: How is AI impacting Faceless YouTube channels?
A: If you’re using AI to crank out repetitious slop with little to no effort, you’re flirting with demonetization. That’s number one. But if you’re using AI to make useful, original videos people actually enjoy watching, you’re only gonna make more money, Matt would argue. Because now you can generate images, voiceovers, sounds, and even whole-ass videos from simple prompts. That’s insane. Put on a diaper and don’t get up till you’ve got 100 Shorts done.
Q: What if I’d rather do jury duty than mess around on YouTube?
A: First, can we just agree? Jury duty is wild. We’re really out here crowdsourcing justice with America’s dumbest people? Like, this bitch works at Culver’s. Are you sure she understands circumstantial evidence? Last week she broke the custard machine. This week she gets to decide whether a man goes home? Crazy. Anyways, if YouTube automation sounds like hell, I’d look at digital real estate instead. Here’s a short video that breaks it down.