At 0.85, Arctic Circle pulls away from every other neighbor in TacoTime's top 10 — a gap that marks this as a spike-shaped audience, concentrated around a single structural twin. No other neighbor comes within 0.07 of that score.
The remaining nine neighbors span a notably cross-kind range. Stinker Stores (0.78) and Runza (0.78) are the next closest, followed by ABRA Auto Body and Glass (0.76) and Holiday Hair (0.76). Only two of the top 10 share TacoTime's own subcategory — Arctic Circle and Runza are both QSR; the rest are drawn from Automotive Maintenance and Repair, Beauty Salons and Spas, Fictional Characters, Furniture Stores, Comedians, Casual Dining, and Automotive Parts and Accessories. That subcategory spread — auto services, hair salons, a furniture retailer, a comedian — points to an audience defined less by food preferences than by a regional, everyday-errand profile. Dwight K. Schrute (0.75) and Slumberland Furniture (0.75) sitting alongside Bert Kreischer (0.75) and Pizza Ranch (0.74) reinforces that pattern: this audience overlaps with Midwestern brick-and-mortar regulars and mainstream entertainment consumers more than with the broader QSR competitive set.
The spike on Arctic Circle, combined with the cross-kind scatter below it, suggests TacoTime's audience has a tight regional core and a wide everyday-life footprint beyond it.