Segregation remains a pressing social issue, and one of the most well-known models for understanding its dynamics is Thomas Schelling’s Agent-Based Model of Segregation. Schelling’s model, which was developed in the 1970s, explores how individual preferences, even when the majority of people do not hold high preferences for homogeneity can contribute to wider patterns of racial or ethnic segregation. It does this by using a straightforward but effective simulation approach. Agents in the original model stand in for people who would to live close to others who have similar characteristics, like ethnicity. Schelling showed how micro-level decisions eventually compound into macro-level consequences by demonstrating that even little preferences for coexisting with like-minded people can eventually result in extremely segregated groups. This agent-based model, which provides insights into how individual behaviours might result in unintentional societal patterns like segregation, has become a fundamental instrument in the study of social dynamics (Rocco & Jan, 2018). Paolillo and Lorenz (2018) added a significant expansion to Schelling’s model by including agents who are value- and ethnically-oriented. They added value homophily to the model, which allowed agents to be motivated by cultural preferences or shared values rather than just ethnic homophily, which is the preference for neighbours of the same race. This expansion enables a deeper investigation of segregation, in which people’s social identities are shaped by their values as well as their ethnicity. Paolillo and Lorenz’s addition brings the model closer to the intricacies of contemporary cultures by adding value-oriented agents. In these societies, people choose where to reside based on the intersection of many dimensions of identity, such as ethnicity and values (Rocco & Jan, 2018). Building on the work of Paolillo and Lorenz (2018), this paper investigates the effects of varying fractions of value-oriented agents (80% vs. 20%) on segregation dynamics. This paper specifically investigates the effects of changing the percentage of value-oriented agents in a population that is composed of both ethnic and value-oriented agents. We can track the effects of changing values-oriented agent proportions on ethnic and value segregation throughout time by adjusting the Fraction Value-Oriented.