Auralis covers history, science, and natural history topics with a focus on ocean science, prehistoric life, and evolution, delivering documentary-style videos and sleep-friendly nature content without AI. The channel emphasizes deep-dives and educational storytelling, with recent uploads spanning topics like ocean systems, deep-sea creatures, and fossils, and averages around 395.8K views per video. Content has been active since Apr 25, 2024, with 16 videos published and a subscriber base of 97.1K.
marine biology documentariesdeep sea creaturesmarine life exploration
Both target audiences searching for marine biology documentaries and deep sea exploration, reflected by a high 100% search match and strong content alignment (79%), indicating similar documentary-driven marine content.
They share a strong overlap in marine biology and underwater ecosystems queries (search 82%, content 83%), showing closely aligned documentary-focused content on ocean life.
marine biology documentariesmarine life explorationwhales documentary
Targets similar queries on marine life exploration and whales documentaries, with moderate search overlap (46%) but solid content similarity (71%), indicating NG covers comparable ocean topics in a broader brand context.
Shares interest in marine biology and specific topics like octopus and eel biology, evidenced by a low search overlap (24%) but very high content similarity (80%), suggesting similar topics delivered with different emphasis.
marine biology documentariesmarine life explorationunderwater ecosystems
Competes for marine biology and underwater ecosystems audiences (search 13%), but aligns strongly in content (86%), meaning similar topics presented in a different, likely shorter-format style.
marine life explorationoldest living speciesocean trenches life
Engages audiences in marine life exploration and ancient/ocean trench life, with modest search overlap (19%) yet strong content match (81%), indicating similar subject matter delivered with different framing.
Content Landscape
Top competitors include BBC Earth (87% match) and Natural World Facts (83% match). Both overlap with Auralis on queries such as marine biology documentaries, deep sea creatures, and underwater ecosystems. BBC Earth has 14.3M subscribers, significantly larger than Auralis, while Natural World Facts has around 1M subscribers, also larger but closer in scale. National Geographic (61% match) also competes on similar topics like marine life exploration and whales documentary. Real Science (57% match) and Marine Planet (57% match) round out the competitive set with overlapping queries like octopus behavior and underwater ecosystems. All identified competitors share a focus on nature, ocean science, and evolutionary topics, but differ in audience size and breadth of science coverage.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Which YouTube channels are most similar to Auralis?
BBC Earth — 14.3M subscribers, match 87%; Natural World Facts — 1M subscribers, match 83%; National Geographic — 25.9M subscribers, match 61%. They all create educational nature, science, and documentary content about the natural world and Earth history.
What type of content does Auralis make?
Auralis creates documentary-style nature and science videos about Earth, oceans, fossils, dinosaurs, and prehistoric life, often featuring HD documentaries and references to natural history topics. It averages around 395.8K views per video, with multiple uploads per week, as seen in recent videos like 'Why Life in the Mariana Trench is So Weird' (591.8K views) and 'Why Ocean Teeth Got So Weird' (268.3K views).
How do we determine which channels are similar to Auralis?
We analyze Auralis's recent videos, generate topic-relevant search queries, check YouTube search results, and compare the meaning of each channel's content to measure similarity. The result is a ranked list sorted by SERP overlap, semantic similarity, and search appearances.