Difference between revisions of "Color pie"

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(much expanded)
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* '''white''': order, peace, safety, community, civilization; following rules, and making sure other people follow them; absolutism
 
* '''white''': order, peace, safety, community, civilization; following rules, and making sure other people follow them; absolutism
 
** '''enemies''': red, black
 
** '''enemies''': red, black
 +
** '''2015-07-13''': [https://magic.wizards.com/en/articles/archive/making-magic/great-white-way-revisited-2015-07-13 The Great White Way Revisited]
 
** '''politics''': everyone should be treated equally, regardless of need; may buy into the [[fair world fallacy]]
 
** '''politics''': everyone should be treated equally, regardless of need; may buy into the [[fair world fallacy]]
 
* '''blue''': perfection, purity, discovering yourself, opportunity
 
* '''blue''': perfection, purity, discovering yourself, opportunity

Revision as of 13:52, 16 October 2019

a richer representation of the concept ("white" is shown in yellow)

About

The color pie or "color wheel" is a concept used by the card-trading game Magic: The Gathering (MtG) as a way of categorizing how individuals are motivated. Although it was created for usage in a fictional context, it seems to map fairly well to how real people are motivated.

The colors are shown on the back of every MtG card in a pentagonal pattern, such that each color is opposite two other colors which generally oppose that color's motivations (its "enemies"). Clockwise from the top, the colors are:

  • white: order, peace, safety, community, civilization; following rules, and making sure other people follow them; absolutism
  • blue: perfection, purity, discovering yourself, opportunity
  • black: amoral, success is all that matters, manipulation and deceit are acceptable tools
  • red: impulse, spontaneity, love of sensation and immediate experience
  • green: acceptance, tradition, love of nature, distaste for artificial change

Fully-realized characters (or real-life individuals) most often consist of some combination of these traits, often including colors that are mutual "enemies". An example:

Links