Magic: The Gathering Drive to Work Podcast - #702: White-Blue
Episode Date: January 3, 2020This is the first in a series on the two-color pairs. I begin by examining white-blue. ...
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I'm pulling on my driveway. We all know what that means. It's time for another drive to work.
Okay, so today I'm going to start a new series on two colors.
So I've done single colors before, but I've not done two colors.
So I'm going to talk through each of the two color pairs.
In the past I've talked a little bit about the guilds, if you will.
Um, not in the past, I've talked a little bit about the guilds, if you will.
Um, this is a little more general talking about each of the color pairs, why the colors get along, why they don't and stuff like that.
So I'm going to walk through each of the potential.
Um, I'm just going to explain exactly what, I mean, today is white, blue.
What is white, blue all about?
Okay.
So, um, when I, when I when I did an article on the guilds,
so I'm going to use a similar structure to that,
although I'm going to be talking more generically about the color pairs
and not specifically the guild of the color pairs.
Okay, so the first question is, what do the colors have in common?
So the way to understand what colors have in common
is to look at their shared enemy.
Okay, so for white and blue, who is their shared enemy? Well, their shared enemy is red.
And so one of the things that I think that you can understand what a white blue have in common
is kind of, well, what is red about? Because white and blue in many ways,
their combination represents opposite of their shared enemy, red.
Okay, so red is all about following your emotion, being impulsive, doing what you feel, right?
So white and blue definitely represent the opposite of that, in that they represent sort of structure and planning.
So for example, when you take the white-red conflict,
which is structure versus chaos,
red just wants to do what it wants to do,
and white has to be orderly about things.
When you take the blue-red conflict,
red is about emotion, and blue is about intellect.
So, blue wants to think things through
and not act, not act, it wants to be cautious in the way it acts.
So, okay, let's take white and blue and put them together. Okay, so white has the structure of, in
its white-red conflict, and it has its intellect from the blue-red conflict. Okay, so it's structure
and intellect. What that means is that white-blue likes planning.
They really crave the structure of white and the thought, thinking ahead of blue.
And what that means is they're the colors that strategize.
They're the colors that are very much about making systems,
but making systems that allow them long-term to get what they want.
And so white-blue is very much about the idea of...
And from that, white-blue, for example, is the color of civilization.
You know, it's the color of...
White wants to bring people together,
and blue wants to be the best that they can be, right?
So if you take the blue sort of trying to improve and white's desire to look out for the group, you start getting improving of the group, which is civilization.
Is how do we use technology and education to make things better for people as a whole?
And that's how you start getting into civilization. That's why white and blue represent the idea of, you know, in some ways, white blue is very much like cities. It's sort of
like, let's take the structure that white has and advance upon it and maximize it. You know,
blue is very much about the tabula rasa, which is, you know, starting with a blank slate and making you the best that you can be and improving itself.
So it takes the combination of white's emphasis on the group and blue's emphasis on improvement and puts those together.
And so the idea of how do you improve the group?
Okay.
The next thing that you have to ask yourself is,
what is, how do the colors differ?
Like, so clearly their overlap is the desire for,
the desire to avoid chaos, right? The desire to be something that moves things toward a more orderly fashion.
Okay, but where do the colors differ?
And the way to understand that
is to look at the ally of each color
that's unique to that color.
And when you have two colors
that are next to each other,
each has an ally
and that those allies are enemies
of each other.
So for example,
blue's ally other than white is black.
White's ally other than than blue, is green.
Well, black and green are enemies.
So let's understand the difference between black and green.
The core conflict between black and green is green believes that the world is structured the way it's supposed to be.
That the idea is the acceptance of your role in the world. And black is all about
the idea of paving your own way in the world. That you get to do, you know, you can do what you want
to do. And that you can do whatever you're able to do. That you're not, you should not be restricted.
You know, black very much does not like restrictions. Black wants to do what it wants to do.
And, you know, green has a sense of destiny
to it. This idea that you were born into a role and that you have, you know, your job in life is
to understand and recognize what that role is. And black is like, be what you want to be, do what
you want to do, you know, and that black is all about, you can take opportunities, you know, you
can do whatever you want if you're willing to take the opportunity to do it.
Black is all about the idea of, that the only thing standing in your way from getting what
you want is just having the willingness to do what it takes.
And black is very much about having the willingness to do what is necessary to get black what it takes. And black is very much about having the willingness to do what is necessary to get
black what it wants. Okay, now let's take a look and look at how white and blue mirror that conflict.
Well, blue sides with black, right? Blue, very much, blue is about the tabula rasa. Blue is about the
idea that you can become anything you want. So clearly it, I mean, once again, blue is an enemy of green, right? So blue
also believes that you have the ability to dictate who and what you are. You know, that's something
that blue and black share is this idea that you can change and that you don't have to accept,
like you don't have to accept the role you were born into. You can become whatever you want to be.
Now white, if you look at white's
conflict with black, white's all
about the good of the group versus the good of the individual.
Right? White believes
white and
green, you know, when we're looking at the enemy
of black, are definitely colors that believe
about thinking about the group as a whole.
The idea that
you have to think about the greater good.
Where black is very much about the selfish self.
And so white looks at this conflict and says, look, I agree with green.
I agree that, you know, if everybody is just looking out for themselves, if everybody is
trying to maximize their own needs, that's going to lead to disaster.
That's going to lead to something bad.
And so white very much says, okay, I agree with green.
I agree that it is better for people to accept the role that they were born into
because, you know, there is a structure that, you know,
white and green very much agree with the idea of community.
And so white is agreeing with the idea that, look,
white doesn't agree as much as green on the idea that you're born into your role,
but it does understand that kind of fighting that causes more conflict
and that if people could think about what they do that would help the whole,
that would be better.
And so green has this idea that you're born into the role, but White definitely believes
that, hey, if you could think about how you, what role you play in the larger ecosystem
in the sense that, hey, we're better off as a whole if you're there and looking out for
everybody else and not just for yourself.
and looking out for everybody else and not just for yourself.
So the conflict in white and blue is very much a conflict about who you can become.
And so one of the things that white and blue,
normally what happens is you lean into your similarities and you lean away from your differences when you have a color pair,
especially an allied color pair, right?
So the idea is white and blue is
very much about not being red. It's very much about setting up processes so that you are not
falling victim to impulses and to short-term thinking. That white-blue is very much the color pair about long-term thinking, about really understanding the role that you
fulfill.
Well, I'll put the wrong word.
But white and blue is very much about the idea of thinking in the extreme of you want
to structure what you're doing so that you benefit yourself and everybody else.
But the one thing that white and blue sort of shy away from a little bit is they have a little bit of difference
on where your responsibilities lie as far as how much you're supposed to follow the status quo versus pave a new path.
So white and blue tends to focus less on that, that when they get together,
they lean into their similarities and they lean away from their differences. And so that white
and blue as a color pair spends more time looking at sort of how to improve society, how to create civilization, how to set up structures
that enable everybody to be better off. And what that means is blue definitely has a sense that's
a little more individualistic, but when it gets together with white, blue tends to lean toward
the group. That when blue and white
get together, blue is a little bit more about improving not itself but
improving the group as a whole because it leans toward the white. White
meanwhile is a little bit more about looking forward than looking backwards
because when white and green get together, they're very much about tradition
and very much about acknowledging what has been.
But when white and blue get together,
white leans more toward future looking
and away from past looking.
Blue leans more toward thinking of the group
and less away from thinking of the individual.
Because what they're doing is,
and this is true of any two-color pair,
is you definitely play into where you line up
and where there are synergies.
Okay.
The next question we ask is,
what does the color care about?
Okay, so white and blue,
what is it that they want? And I think that one of the things
I like to think about all the color pairs, when you get them together, the two color pairs,
is they have a philosophy. Just like the single color cards have a philosophy,
the color pairs have a philosophy. And the one thing I should stress real quickly is
that the guilds, while they might be the
low-hanging fruit of the color combinations, they are not the only way to execute on the
colors.
For example, we did Dragons of Tarkir, also an allied set.
Definitely there were factions there that were allied factions, but they didn't necessarily
care about the same thing.
That one of the things that I'm trying to talk about today is a little bit bigger of what white
and blue can care about. Now, when you get to Azorius, Azorius has a very, for example, Azorius
was very law-minded. You know, in the world of Ravnica, Azorius is the guild that's all about sort of government and law.
Because the idea is we live in a city and our goal, the goal of White Blue,
so what is White Blue's philosophy?
White Blue's philosophy is the idea of how do we improve upon and help the group as a whole?
Now, white-green is very much about numbers.
So white is the group-centric color.
So both white-green and white-blue care about the group.
But white-green is more about the numbers of the group, the volume of the group.
That white-green very much is about, I of the group, the volume of the group.
That white-green very much is about, I want to get as many people in the group as possible.
You know, white-green strength comes from numbers.
White-blue, in contrast, is a little less focused on the size of the group.
It's less about quantity of the group than quality of the group. That white-blue is like, okay, I
want to make a system by which we help
the group as much as we can. So white-blue is a little bit more
about improving the situation
of the group than it is, like, green and white are very much about
recruitment. Green and white are very much about recruitment. Green and white are very much about
the people as a people, and they're about numbers.
White and blue are about systems, are about
larger, like, I think really when you get white and blue
together, what you are doing is you are taking white's
caring about, thinking about what is you are taking whites, whites caring about thinking about
what is good for the group and blues caring about how to improve things. Like that really to me is
the philosophy of white blue is what can I do to make the group the best that it can be? How do I
take the group and improve the group? You get to white green, you're not improving the group, you're growing the group
likewise by the way
when we get to blue black, so one of the things that's very interesting is
if you want to understand any combination
if you want to understand how two colors get together, you want to understand how those colors
get along, you want to understand how those colors get along.
Like, understanding the white-blue allyship
means you have to understand blue-black and white-green.
So, for example, I'm spending a lot of time right now
talking about the good of the group.
Okay, well, you get to green and white,
and green and white is about sort of the value of the group as a whole.
And when you get into green and white, there's a lot more emphasis on looking backwards,
on tradition, on where things are, on the role of how things fit into the things.
And it's much more, you know, when white gets with green, it's looking more backwards.
When white gets with blue, it is looking forwards.
It is something where it is trying to figure out how not just to make the group better now,
but how to continually to make the group better.
Okay, now let's talk a little bit about change.
Because blue is very much about change, especially when blue gets together with black.
Blue and black as a color pair is focused on change,
because green is focused on things remaining the
same. But, so when blue and black get together, they're very much about doing whatever it takes
to get what you need. And the reason is when blue gets together with black, it plays into its more
selfish impulses, right? Blue is about improving. Okay, well, blue and black getting together
is about improving yourself.
Black does not care about the group.
Black does not care about larger needs.
Black cares about how do I get what I want.
So black and blue getting together
does tap into blue's desire to improve things,
but it goes inward.
It goes, how can I make myself better? How can I improve myself?
But when blue teams up with white, it goes outward. How can I make the world as a whole better?
Now, making the world as a whole better does help you. Like blue, for example, in isolation,
blue is very much about wanting to be the best that it can be.
And that means both on the micro level of improving itself and the macro level of improving the world it lives in.
And the interesting thing as we start looking at white and blue is the idea that, like I said,
they are leaning into their similarities and leaning away from their differences.
Blue has a selfish quality when it leans toward black.
Green has a more traditional view when it leans toward green.
White does when it leans toward green.
But when they come together, then they're leaning away from that.
And that's important to understand when you're looking at color pairs,
is understanding sort of where they happen.
The other thing, by the way, is,
as you'll see as I do the series,
the ally colors are a little bit different than the enemy colors
because the ally colors are structured on a similarity
and the enemy colors are structured upon a difference.
And that is fundamental.
Because what will happen is,
as I talk about the ally color pairs,
I'm going to explain, I mean, as I talk about the ally color pairs,
I'm going to explain, I mean, I will explain what the enemies have in common,
but their differences more define the relationship than the similarities. Where with allies, it's the similarities that define the relationship.
Okay.
So what does white-blue dislike?
What do they strive for?
They strive to improve the community.
They strive to create systems that make things better
and that will improve things over time.
And systems that look long-term.
Systems that don't just help now,
but help the people across time,
you know, as things progress.
Okay, so what do they despise?
Well, the thing about allies is all you have to do is go to their enemy.
What do they despise?
Essentially what red represents, because their shared enemy is red.
Okay, what does red represent?
Red is all about, it's very inward looking.
And the idea of red is, I feel things.
I need to react to the things I feel.
That, you know, part of being who you are
is recognizing, like, you have needs.
Red Soul philosophy is you have needs
and that if you ignore your needs,
you just, like, you are hurting yourself.
That part of truly living free is following your heart, is living your passion.
And so red is very much all about leaning into its impulses, following its emotions, doing what is right in the moment.
And what that means for red is red really believes that you need to be happy in the moment. And what that means for Red is Red really believes that you need to be
happy in the moment. That if you feel something, you should act on it. If I'm mad, I should punch
somebody. If I'm sad, I should cry. If I'm happy, I should laugh. That I should live life in the
moment. Okay, well then that is the contrast of versus white-blue. White-blue
is not about living in the moment. It's not about impulse. It's not about emotion. That
white-blue says we're trying to do what's best for the group long-term. And what that
means is we have to understand the danger of impulse, the danger of emotion. Because what happens is when
you're acting emotionally or impulsively, you are thinking about yourself and only yourself.
You know, you are prioritizing your needs versus the needs of everybody else. And so white-blue very much, when it sort of comes together, says, what do I want?
I want to make sure that people don't follow their impulses, that people don't follow their emotions.
So the reason, so how does white-blue, what does white-blue prevent that?
Well, white-blue says, I will create systems that minimize people's abilities to do that.
How do I protect people from themselves?
I create rules and structures to do that.
That, for example, you know, if red gets into a fight whenever red is angry and that could
lead to harming somebody, well, I make laws that say that you can't beat somebody up.
And if you do, we'll put you in jail. And so the way the white-blue combats red is it works hard to create
systems that discourage red behavior. Now, as we get to Azorius, okay. And once again, there are a bunch of different ways
that you could create structure for the group.
The low-hanging fruit, I admit,
in a lot of ways, Ravnica is the low-hanging fruit.
We were making factions for the first time.
We're like, okay.
So the low-hanging fruit is laws,
is government, is politics.
And then the way the Azores got set up in Ravnica is,
okay, we're the guild that looks out for people in the long-term way.
What are we going to do?
Okay, here's what we're going to do.
We're going to make systems and rules and laws that say,
you know that behavior that gets you in trouble?
Eh, you can't do that.
You're not allowed to do that.
Literally, it's forbidden.
And if you act that way, if you act in such a way where you're prioritizing your needs
and your impulses and your emotions, well, guess what?
There's punishment for that.
White-blue, by the way, is very big on punishment.
White-blue, okay, so let's very big on punishment. White-blue...
Okay, so let's get into another thing of where they come from.
White, as a color, is very much about morality, right?
White believes that they're...
White likes to make rules.
One of the ways white makes rules is through law.
Another way that whites make rules is through morality or religion.
And I think that the law part of white leans more toward blue,
and that blue likes to sort of create systems.
And the religion part leans more toward green, because green likes to create traditions.
And on some level, traditions and laws have a lot of the same functionality to them.
You know, the idea behind them is that they are trying to get people
to act a certain way in a way that white believes is for the better.
But, like I said, when we get to the colors, we lean into the things.
And blue's love of systems, that's another thing you see between white and blue's love of systems that's
another thing you see between white and blue is
white loves structure blue loves systems
like one of the things about blue
that we really play up is
in magic one of the things that blue
does is blue cares about knowledge
blue believes that knowledge
is power and that for example
when blue fights with magic
magical duels,
blue is very much about, oh, well, the more I understand the nature of magic, the better I can fight. Why is blue the color of counter spells? Because, well, how better to stop magic than
learning how to stop it at its source? Why is blue the color of unsummoning? Okay, well,
if I can understand magic, I can undo the magic.
And that blue really is system-oriented.
It enjoys and likes the systems.
And so when white and blue get together,
it leans into that systems.
Blue, in contrast,
is not much about tradition, right?
Blue and black are all about change.
So the idea of let's do something and why should we do it? Because it's the way we've always done it. Blue's not fond of that. Like the thing,
the reason blue like systems is systems are adaptable. Systems can change with the time.
Like one of the things, another big difference between blue and green, which is where, how blue-white is different from, say,
white-green, is blue believes in change. Blue believes in constant change. Blue believes that
you're never, you know, blue is striving for its potential of being the best that it can be. Well,
if you want to be the best that you can be, you need to have means and ways to constantly be improving.
So what blue says is, okay, I want to make systems, but I want to make fluid dynamic systems
that can change. Green, in contrast, is all about things being the way they are. So when it wants
to make traditions, is the way we do it this way because it's the way we've always done it.
Not so good with blue. So when white gets together,
when white says,
I want to take order and combine it with systems,
blue's like, yes, I'm all over that.
When white goes, I want to take systems and combine them with tradition,
green's all over that, but blue is not.
So in general, when blue and white get together,
you see them messing with systems
more so than you see them messing with
stuff like tradition and religion and such
but
that said there are a lot of
different kinds of systems that you can
create that
law is the
low hanging fruit system but it is
not the only system
you know there are a lot
of
the thing you tend to see in a white blue You know, there are a lot of...
The thing you tend to see in a white-blue structured thing
is something where there is rules set,
but there are means by which the rules can be adapted.
For example, let's get into the idea of law.
Law is a very blue-white concept.
Well, I mean, law in the sense of, well, here's the thing about a law.
That laws are changing things.
That the way you create a law is, well, I should say, sorry, white and blue are more about government and
politics. I mean, law is part of that, but I mean, white is a color, very much it cares
about law. But when blue and white get together, the reason that they, like, white is less
about politics and blue-white is about politics, because blue-white is about making dynamic systems and dynamic systems that protect
people.
Well, politics is something in which you're trying to create something for the good of
the group.
Now, the interesting thing is when black gets together with blue, black understands that politics can be used
in a manipulative way.
And so when black and blue get together,
you definitely see,
like politics sort of sits in blue.
And law, I guess that's okay.
Part of the fun of me doing my podcast is I can realize things.
So politics is more base blue and law is more base white
because blue wants a system that changes with time
and white wants a system that protects.
Now, there's a lot of synergy between politics and law.
Obviously, the politicians are the ones who make the
law. But the interesting thing is when blue leans toward black, you start
getting into politics that more, a little more Machiavellian, if you will. Politics
that are used to get you what you want. And you get politics combined with white,
you're more playing into politics that are protecting. More politics from a...
Once again, I guess it's politics helping the group
versus politics helping the individual.
That's another break between blue-black and blue-white.
So when you get the politics of blue and the law of white,
that's when you get things that are creating interesting systems.
The other thing in general that you see with blue and white,
blue and white, once again, care about the good of the group from a structural standpoint.
And so let's talk about, like, yes, they'll create politics and law.
They'll do that.
But they're also, let's get a little bit into technology.
So one of the things that Blue cares very much about is the idea of using whatever tools are available to improve yourself or your group.
to improve yourself or your group.
And so Blue is very big on the idea of technology because Blue is like,
Blue believes in potential
and Blue wants to be the best that it can be.
And the things that Blue uses,
the tools that Blue uses,
knowledge is number one,
but sort of coming out of knowledge,
you get education,
you get training, and you get tools.
And the idea is, how do I get better at something?
Well, I could learn about it, I could practice it, or I could get tools that help me do it.
So blue, very much about education, training, and tools.
Education, training, and tools.
White, okay, white is very much about the idea of looking out for the group as a whole.
So you start getting into some other things.
For example, vocations are very much a white-blue thing, right?
The idea is blue says training is important.
White says you have to help the group.
Okay, well one of the ways you can help the group is you could learn to do something that is beneficial for the group.
So in a white-blue society, it very much values the idea
that there are skills that are important and necessary for the good of the group
and different people need to learn those skills.
So the way to think of this is
how does a society improve itself?
And the answer there is
by understanding the needs it has
and doing those.
And so one of the needs is vocations.
So let's say you live in a town
because fantasy is a little more medieval
than modern day.
So the idea is you might need a blacksmith.
You might need somebody who can carve and shape metal.
You're going to need a woodworker.
You're going to need farmers.
You're going to need...
There's a lot of roles that happen,
and that one of the things that happens when you get into white-blue,
which is why you get into civilization,
is the more specialized people are, the more advanced the civilization
can become. So, for example, for those that studied history, when everybody had to be a farmer,
well, people didn't have a lot of time to do things other than farming because they were just being
farmers. But when you could grow enough food that you can make so much food that you could feed other people,
that freed people up to go, okay, well, now I'm going to dedicate my time to learning how to
make glass or shape metal or work with wood. And all of a sudden, or work with leather or,
you know, craftsmen started happening. And what that means is now, okay, I can take the time and energy to use the
tools available to me to make things that are better for us. Oh, if I can make glass, I can
make bottles and containers that might make it easier to get water. You know, if I can do metal,
I can make horseshoes and I can make tools, you know, and I could, the idea is part of a white-blue society is that the way you
advance society is you allow people to use the technology to to specialize in
what they do and so a white-blue society very much is about roles is very much
about who's capable of doing what and is looking at means and ways that improve
the system as a whole to improve society as a whole.
And that when you get into white and blue, for example, we could have a white-blue civilization
that is not really about politics and law, but might be more about roles in society and sort of vocations and jobs and stuff.
There's different aspects that you could play into depending on what you want.
Okay, now comes the big question is, what is the weakness?
What does, you know, what White Blue does well is systems.
You know, what White Blue excels at is finding ways that you can make changes that
help the group as a whole. Okay, where does white-blue fall down? Where is white-blue's
weakness? And the answer there is that white-blue is so much about looking ahead, is so much about
planning and making the systems that it doesn't have, it doesn't have the ability to
change quickly. It is not fast. In fact, it is very slow. And no surprise, blue and white are
the two slowest colors, although white has a component of it that can be fast. But you get
them together and the nature of what they do, of what they care about, which is the idea that,
you know, they're looking, because they have Blue's desire to think things out and White's
desire to maximize its systems, it very much is the color that, like, the reason I'm going
to win is not because I quickly act,
but I'm the one that has thought it out ahead of time.
I'm the one that's planned it.
But the negative that comes from that is spontaneity.
You know, the ability to sort of react quickly, the ability to sort of work with its gut,
the ability to sort of work with its gut, the ability to have, you know, because it shuns impulses,
it shuns the tools that allow it to make a split decision.
Like a lot, you know, when you start getting into red, one of the advantages of red,
one of the advantages of impulse is that you can make decisions very fast.
Partly because you're not thinking long term,
but another part of it is you just maximize the skills that let you make very fast decisions.
If you're always living your life quickly making decisions,
well, you learn how to make quick decisions.
White's blue weakness is it doesn't know how to make quick decisions. White blue does not know how to...
White blue is not set up to think on its feet.
It's not set up to react quickly.
It is pretty inflexible in a lot of ways.
And built into it is this desire to make sure that it's doing the right thing.
So the negative of white-blue is, and this is true mechanically, it's just slow.
When you get white and blue together, you are not winning particularly fast.
Now mechanically, so one of the things that's interesting is whenever you make an archetype,
you want to understand how to do the fast and slow archetype. So white-blue, it's easy to do it. The slow archetype of white-blue is
control, right? If I want to put white and blue together from a magic standpoint, what
I want to do is make a deck where I have answers to all the things, and white and blue are
graded answers. Blue has counterspells, I mean, white can destroy almost any
card type. I guess it doesn't destroy
lands, and it doesn't...
I mean, it can deal with planeswalkers.
Lands is the only thing...
I don't know what I'm getting, but white doesn't
do pinpoint land destruction. Other than that,
it's got answers to every problem.
White is the color of answers.
Blue is the color
that, while it doesn't destroy things, can counter things
and bounce things and steal things. And that between blue and white, they have a lot of answers
to a lot of problems. So the idea essentially is, if white-blue can get to the point where it has
access to all its answers, it is unbeatable. It is unstoppable. But that comes from, that means
that it's got to get to a point where it's established with a control. So white-blue,
in general, tends to be very slow. And what it tends to be is stall, stall, stall, stall, stall,
get to a point where I have control of things, then win the game through my control.
But for any archetype, we want to have a fast and a slow. So white blue it's very easy to
do the slow archetype. It is built into what the color is. So doing the slow archetype is pretty
easy. The trick is how do we do the fast archetype? So the way we do that is the one other thing we
look at is are there other aspects of the color that are unique to white and blue? And it turns out that white and blue are number one and two,
and one other thing that's very important in magic, which is flying.
Blue is the color of air.
White is the color of, well, blue and white together are the color of birds.
And white, anyway, white and blue, through their nature,
are the colors that have the best access
and easiest access to flying.
Blue is number one in volume of flying.
White is number one in the best cheap flying creatures.
But between them, they have very good flying.
So, if you combine white and blue together
and you want to go more aggressive,
the way we tend to do that is lean in on its flying
and say, okay, well, I can have some answers,
but I have the ability to get out threats
that can win the game more quickly.
So when we want white and blue to be a little quicker,
we play into its flying aspect.
And that is us leaning into something
a little bit more mechanical.
It is not as if flying is quite as philosophical
about what white and blue is about.
I mean, there are reasons why flying is good in white and blue,
but it's a little less philosophically tied into it.
But we want to have fast and slow versions of things.
And so I think philosophically,
white and blue wants to be a more slow controlling deck
from a philosophical standpoint.
But we do want to offer it and give itself the ability to do faster things.
Okay, I'm almost at work.
So let me ask the final question, which is,
where else could we see White-Blue?
We've seen the Zorius.
We get it.
It can make the rules.
It could be in charge of the politics and the law.
Where else can white-blue go?
And the answer there is
that there are many different systems
that you can create
to try to make a better society.
I do think having,
as Ravnica does,
okay, we have a very hardcore structured system
by which we have politics and laws to do that.
Another place that you can see on blue and white
is playing into the idea,
like there are other ways to play up the idea
of trying to help the group
and trying to create systems.
Politics is a system.
Law is a system.
So definitely,
there is a desire to do...
I mean, there are other kinds of systems.
I think when we look for other white-blue,
you will see other kinds of systems
and other ways by which you can create it.
And the other thing also is, even when we talk about politics or talk about law,
there are different ways to handle that as well.
I do think we could have a system where white and blue is kind of in charge of the politics and the law,
but it being very different from Azorius.
of the law, but it being very different from Azorius. Azorius is
definitely very fuddy-duddy
and very sort of like,
you know, we
keep the scrolls
and we, you know, it's very into
the minute of it. And like once I said,
I think that's the low-hanging fruit of blue-white, but that
doesn't mean it's the only thing that blue and white can do.
Anyway,
I hope you guys, I've
had a lot of requests for us to do
for me
to do
some color pairing
podcasts
so anyway
the fact that I did
white blue
kind of says
there's nine more coming
my plan is not
to do them consecutively
I think I'm just going
to do them over time
I'm not going to take
forever long to do them
but
I decided not to do
like a ten week series,
5 weeks in a row, 2 every week.
I will be getting to them, but it's something
I'm going to do from time to time. I hope you enjoy it.
I love talking color pie,
so it's fun talking
color pairs. I hope you guys
enjoy it.
The plan, by the way, is I will go in
a Woburg order. So I will
do white, blue, blue, black, black, red, red, green, green, white.
Then I will do white, black, blue, red, black, green, red, white, green, blue.
Anyway, I'm now at work.
So we all know what that means.
It means it's the end of my drive to work.
So instead of talking magic, it's time for me to be making magic.
I'll see you guys next time.
Bye-bye.