Guns.com's top 10 neighbors split almost evenly between firearms-adjacent brands and country music acts — a cross-kind pairing that defines the audience's shape. Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audience compositions align; a score near 1.0 means near-identical audience structure.
The firearms cluster leads: Guns & Ammo Magazine (0.97) is the single highest-scoring neighbor, followed by Beretta USA (0.96), Winchester Ammunition (0.96), and Kimber Firearms (0.95) — all Outdoors or B2B brands in the firearms space. Brownells, Inc. (0.94) and Tactical-Life.com (0.94) round out that cluster. That's six of the top 10 drawn from firearms brands and media.
The remaining four are country music acts: Alan Jackson (0.95), Eli Young Band (0.94), Smith & Wesson Inc. (0.94 — a B2B firearms brand, not a musician), and ACM Awards (0.93). Correcting that tally: of the top 10, six are firearms-related entities, two are Musicians and Bands (Alan Jackson and Eli Young Band), one is a B2B firearms brand (Smith & Wesson), and one is an Events and Awards organization (ACM Awards). The scores compress into a narrow band — 0.93 to 0.97 — consistent with the flat shape, where no single neighbor dominates and the cluster holds together uniformly.
The flat, dual-cluster structure — firearms brands and country music acts occupying the same audience neighborhood — indicates that Guns.com's audience is shaped by an overlap between these two content worlds rather than by either alone.