Skip to content

Case-Maker

A person with this pattern builds trust by making the reason clear. They do not expect people to agree from force; they gather facts until the claim can stand on its own. You’d see this in the classmate who brings one saved message to a dispute and changes the conversation without raising their voice.

Integration property: Holds the floor with words when ground is being contested

Case-Maker visual seed
School plate for this NatureType.

Card role: Contradiction Reader

A compact visual role is available for this archetype.

A fuller Card Universe story has not been written yet.

Multiple Natures (MNs)

  • Administrative Nature
  • Adventurous Nature

Multiple Intelligences (MIs)

  • Interpersonal Intelligence
  • Logical Intelligence
  • Linguistic Intelligence
  • Intrapersonal Intelligence
register-shifting in language high causal reasoning reads social state in real time pulls toward high-stakes ground high self-regulation under load
  • Trial Lawyer (adversarial) (primary) - Builds case in language, reads jury and bench, presses contradiction under formal opposition.
  • Appellate Attorney (primary) - Constructs written and oral arguments; maintains composure in adversarial questioning.
  • Debate Coach or Competitive Debater (primary) - Masters argumentation, reads judges and opponents, maintains logic under pressure.
  • Prosecutor (secondary) - Argues cases on behalf of state, must press evidence and manage witness testimony.
  • Legislative Advocate or Policy Advocate (secondary) - Makes formal arguments for policy change before decision-makers.
  • Mediator or Arbitrator (adjacent) - Reconstructs opposing positions into shared framework, but removes the personal stake and advocacy that drive Disputant’s core need.
  • Build airtight case by identifying contradictions in opponent’s logic (primary)
  • Shift register and framing to match audience (jury, judge, panel) (primary)
  • Cross-examine witnesses under high stakes without losing composure (primary)
  • Construct written briefs with precise legal and causal reasoning (secondary)
  • Respond to unexpected challenges in real time (secondary)
  • Competitive debate or moot court (primary)
  • Following high-profile trials and legal proceedings (primary)
  • Reading and arguing about law, philosophy, or policy (secondary)
  • Persuasive writing and rhetoric study (secondary)
  • Young attorney or debater building foundational skills (primary) - Learning procedure, evidence rules, and argumentation technique.
  • Experienced litigator or advocate (primary) - Prime years of winning complex cases and building reputation.
  • Senior mentor or appellate specialist (primary) - Transmitting trial craft and serving as appellate authority.