The Architect (R-V-A-G)

Builds slow, double-checks twice, trusts no one's numbers but their own.

You see the whole board — and sometimes never make a move.

You see the whole board. While everyone else is reacting, you're three moves deep, stress-testing your own numbers and trusting no one's spreadsheet but the one you rebuilt yourself. You're genuinely hard to fool, well-calibrated, and almost never blown up by the surprise that wrecks louder people. That's the Buffett move: sit on cash, ignore the euphoria, strike only when it's unambiguous. But here's your tax — Analysis Paralysis, fed by Information Bias and the Paradox of Choice. More data always feels like progress, so 'one more check' becomes the permanent state, and the same rigor that prevents disasters quietly hides the wins. You don't lose to bad calls; you lose to the calls you studied to death and never made. Buffett sat out tech for decades for exactly this reason. The board was never the problem — the clock was.

Signature blind spot: Analysis Paralysis