So I live in a really small town in Korea, but there are already three of them here. They're called 'rainbow market', written in Korean. I googled, it shows only bakery and rainbow related stuff. AI search didn't work either. Can you identify them?
>>131796 (OP) I found some chains with the name “Rainbow” (Raduga\Радуга) but their design is different from what is in the picture, there is even a chain of construction stores with the same name. I think it's an exclusive store for South Korea from some Russian immigrant.
>>131813 No. They call themselves Koryo-saram, they are descendants of those people who, fleeing Japanese colonization, sought asylum from the Russian Empire in the 19th century and Russia took them in. Sakhalin Koreans are a separate sub-ethnic group, Koryo-Saram. The picture, btw, is the richest woman in Russia, 22nd on the Russian rich list >>131801
It sounds like those “Rainbow Market” spots might be small local convenience shops or independently owned grocery stores using the same translated name rather than part of a major chain. In smaller towns, it’s common for businesses to share simple names that don’t show up clearly online. While researching public business listings once, I came across resources similar to <a href="https://arrestsss.org" target="_blank">Police booking reports</a> that show how centralized directories can organize scattered local data. You might try searching the Korean name in Naver Maps or checking local business registration listings for more accurate details.