There are men in my family who are colour blind.
My grandson found geography very difficult as unfortunately it's not a protected characteristic so had no help in exams to know which area of the maps were pink/red/green etc
Some jobs will be outside what's "allowed" - Airline Pilot,
Air Traffic Controller ,Military Roles involving combat, piloting, or bomb disposal.
Electrician / Electronics Engineer.
Train Driver, Sea Captain...
Reading LED Indicators can be difficult, dropping things on the floor, choosing clothes to wear together, grouping things by colour (obviously).
My husband was teased a lot at school about it "what colour is this".
He bought our grandson pencils and felt tips with the name of the colour on them so life was a bit easier in colour-coded maths/science/geography etc.
Art is also problematic ' unless you embrace it.
In art, a "limitation" might just be an entirely new way to be creative.
You can now get specialised color-blind glasses, (and phone apps that read colors aloud).
...and since traffic lights now have white lines round the edges at least you can be safe driving at night!