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NYTimes Wordplay

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NYTimes Wordplay's nearest neighbors are overwhelmingly journalists and political media figures — not puzzle enthusiasts, game brands, or entertainment properties.

The shape is flat: scores run from 0.98 down to 0.96 across the top 10, with no single neighbor pulling sharply ahead of the rest. Nate Silver leads at 0.98, followed closely by Olivia Nuzzi (0.98) and Nate Cohn (0.97) — all three classified as Journalists. The pattern holds throughout: six of the top 10 neighbors are Journalists, joined by Dan Pfeiffer (0.97, Politicians), Paul Krugman (0.97, Academics), and Jane Mayer (0.97, Journalists). The remaining positions go to Jon Favreau (0.97, Professionals) and Maggie Haberman (0.97, Journalists). No other Magazine appears in the top 10; the center entity's own subcategory is entirely absent from its nearest neighbors.

The cross-kind finding here is the story. NYTimes Wordplay is classified as a Magazine, yet its audience shape aligns almost entirely with political journalism and commentary — a cluster defined by Journalists, Politicians, and Academics rather than by media brands or puzzle-adjacent content. The narrow score band reinforces this: the audience isn't pulled toward any single figure but distributes evenly across a coherent political-media readership.

This suggests the Wordplay audience is less a games-first crowd and more a subset of the broader NYT political-media consumer — people who follow the same journalists and commentators regardless of which NYT vertical they engage with.

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