GrapplingArc takes an intentional, non-mainstream approach to training and competing. The visual language reflect this. It was chosen to extend the content.

Layout, spacing, and color are used to reduce noise or stimulation. We avoid imagery of blood, crowds, and spectacle. Those belong to competition. This space is for what comes before it: introspection.
Our primary color is the dark greenish–blue. It’s calm and neutral. It sits between green and blue by design. No clear classification, much like the internal material fighters deal with under pressure.
Accent colors signal action, direction, or emphasis. If something stands out, it is meant to be read or used. Yellow marks instructions, or critical points. It symbolizes conscious awareness. Soft green marks action points.
Asymmetry, line icons, and technical-style illustration guide reading without overload. Creating a platform that is transparent and promotes preparation without asking belief or emotional buy-in.

The dragon is central for its archetypal meaning, it represents the shadow work. Unlike familiar animals, the dragon is undefined, all of its features speculative. Having a grasp on it is where the fight begins.
Our dragons mix Eastern linocut (representing intuition) and Western style (representing scientific precision). Neither could give a full picture alone.
We have two dragons for a reason. The green dragon represents the internal work, defining boundaries, building brain-body connections.
The blue dragon represents the external work: protecting resources and claiming territory. Training stays inside. Competition pushes you out. That’s the shift.

The Ouroboros dragon, knows for biting its own tail, symbolizes cyclic development. It’s the work training throws you into. A nonlinear progress that goes stage by stage. One round of self-work, a pause, then another. Each cycle adds awareness, governance, and skill.
The raw stuff, the anger, the confusion, the doubt, gets transformed cyclically. You turn it into something you can use: awareness, focus. That’s your edge. Your Magnum Opus, being whole enough to use every part of yourself.

The blue dragon represents the work done. What used to drain energy is now integrated. Resentment and fear have been processed through training, what’s left is awareness and integrity. Ready to compete.
The fire, the inner power shows in posture, breath, and how little you need to move. The coiled tail symbolizes containment. Nothing gets in. Nothing leaks for free.