In a finite game, you try to eliminate all possibilities except the 1 where you win.
But infinite games are most alive when new possibilities emerge ("He still surprises me - I love that about him")
5/ Finite games make you inauthentic. Infinite games make you authentic.
In a finite game, you act out "the abstract requirements of a role."
In an infinite game, you're a concrete person being yourself *without* driving at a certain conclusion.
6/ Finite games incentivize deception, infinite games incentivize openness.
7/ Finite games end with titles: Gold Medalist, World Heavyweight Champ, and so on.
Infinite games - like life itself - *begin* with names.
8/ Don't aim for power, aim for strength.
Wait, aren't they the same?
No.
Power is the ability to bring about the outcomes you want, strength is the ability to face unpredictable outcomes.
You win finite games with power.
You keep infinite games going with strength.
9/ In a finite game you protect boundaries.
Examples: In cricket you protect the boundary ropes, in football the goal post.
In an infinite game you seek new horizons.
A horizon is "simply the point beyond which we cannot see."
You never reach horizons, only find new ones.
10/ Finite games end in explanations, infinite games continue with narratives.
"Explanations settle issues. Narratives raise issues. Explanation sets the need for further inquiry aside; narrative invites us to rethink what we thought we knew."
11/ Here are my absolute favorite lines from the book:
12/ Many more bangers from the book:
~fin~
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