The measurement of sales of
popular music starts high relative to the wedding anniversary scale, concentrating on gold and platinum (see
gold album). Likewise,
credit card companies usually have a "gold card" and a "platinum card" (many formerly had a "silver card" then followed by a "gold card", but due to similarity in appearance between silver and platinum these were often discontinued with the rise in popularity of platinum as a precious metal).
Sports events have a well-established convention (introduced into the
Olympic tradition at the
1904 Summer Olympics), of a hierarchy of
medals:
bronze medal silver medal gold medal. This presumably echoes conventional
coinage systems, in which cheap bronze or
copper denominations could aggregate to intermediate silver coins, then to gold
money. The archetypal British designations (
penny,
shilling and
pound) parallel and reflect this hierarchy. Events-
sponsorship in
sport or in the
arts may involve (for example) silver, gold and/or platinum sponsors.
Fantasy role playing games often have a hierarchy of materials, following the relative strengths of pre-modern metals, bronze, iron and steel, for example, at the lower end, and moving up through fantastic or legendary materials such as
mithril and
adamant. Some
multiplayer video games feature a hierarchy of players that uses precious metal names to distinguish the various levels of skill, often progressing from Bronze to Silver, to Gold, to Platinum, then to Diamond. ==See also==