The top 10 neighbors for Crash Champions span seven distinct subcategories — no single kind dominates, which is the defining feature of a broad audience shape.
Public Storage leads at 0.84, a moving-and-storage service with no surface connection to collision repair. Dealerships follows at 0.81, and Caliber Collision — the one direct same-subcategory neighbor in the top 10 — sits at 0.80. After that, the set fans out quickly: Champs Sports (0.79, sporting goods retail), Jason's Deli (0.79, fast casual dining), CarMax (0.79, dealerships), and Floor and Decor (0.79, home goods retail) all cluster within a point of each other. Guitar Center (0.78, music retail), Budget Truck Rental (0.77, car rental), and 7-Eleven (0.75, convenience stores) round out the ten.
Tallying the subcategories: two dealership entries, one fellow maintenance-and-repair service, two retail subcategories, one moving-and-storage, one car rental, one fast casual, one home goods, and one convenience store. The automotive cluster is real but thin — Caliber Collision is the only same-subcategory match in the top 10, and the remaining nine neighbors are drawn from retail, food service, storage, and rental categories. That cross-kind spread, with scores compressed between 0.75 and 0.84, signals an audience whose shape is defined less by automotive interest than by broad, everyday-errand behavior.
The flat compression of scores across such varied entity types suggests Crash Champions draws an audience that looks like mainstream American consumer traffic rather than a specialized automotive segment.