I'd like to get a list of instances in mathematics where a problem with two parameters (or some parameter set to $2$) is qualitatively different from the instance of that problem with the value set to $3$.
Examples include:
Hypothesis testing, where for 2 alternatives there is an analytically computable minimax strategy (Neyman-Pearson), but for 3 or more, the minimax decision is NP-hard to compute.
Voting theory: for 2 alternatives, simple majority vote is Pareto-efficient, non-dictatorial, and satisfies independence of irrelevant alternatives (trivially). For 3 or more, we have Arrow's impossibility theorem.
Graph coloring/satisfiability: both 2-SAT and 2-COLORABILITY are in P, while 3-SAT and 3-COLORABILITY are NP-complete
If anyone has any unifying intuition for why/when 3 is qualitatively different from 2, that would be great too.