StrategyWiki:Staff lounge

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The In-depth Fighter Analysis Project Proposal
So, as everyone can see from the discussion about the scope of fighting game guides, I have a new idea. One of the things that is holding us back from adding gameplay strategies for each character is because of the sheer amount of work that needs to be done, from researching to writing down what works for each character. So why not make it a group effort?

And thus I propose the "In-depth Fighter Analysis Project", to give all fighting games specific character strategies, matchup informations and other in-depth info that will improve the quality of each guide. The concept is that we choose a fighting game, or even a specific character, and focus on that FG/character. This includes researching strategies for that character or creating them if there aren't any that can be found. Ideally, each character page should have a gameplay overview of the character, certain techniques and how to perform them, notable moves analysis, character matchups and a short combo list.

So what do you all think of the concept? Is it something that could work, or does it sound way too ambitious? T.testLP(talk) 09:39, 6 November 2012 (UTC)


 * It's not a bad idea. However, I think it should be scrapped for the time being, since only one person has been regularly working on the fighting game guides, and in limited capacity. If more fighting game editors appear, it would make sense to collaborate and focus efforts as you suggest. -- 17:09, 7 November 2012 (UTC)


 * In truth test, there's nothing stopping anyone from doing any of that right now. If that's what you'd like to add to the character pages, by all means, please go ahead and do it.  There's no "restrictions" on what can be placed there, it's just a question of whether anyone has the motivation to write it all up.   Pro  cyon  03:00, 8 November 2012 (UTC)

WiiU button template
I just put together a WiiU controls template and slapped some button images together. Most of the images are recycled, but they should do unless somebody wants to make better ones or whatever. Wanderer (talk) 06:42, 18 November 2012 (UTC)
 * Thank you, Wanderer! -- 17:49, 7 December 2012 (UTC)

Series categories with only two games
This issue may have been archived (given that it was first brought up on this page over a month ago), but I still feel that categories for series with only two games are unnecessary; they are not really series as such, but duos of games from their respective time periods, and (in most cases) there has been no indication that there are ever going to be any further titles in them (one notable exception, however, is when Rally-X Arrangement and Dig Dug Arrangement were released as part of the compilation arcade game Namco Classics Collection Vol. 2 in 1996, as both the and  series were only comprised of two games prior to that point). Namcorules (talk) 10:00, 8 December 2012 (UTC)
 * My take on it is if a reader comes to a page (that includes any of us), they may ask "What other games are in the series?". If they only see a followed by link, the question remains unanswered, only telling them a possible one other game. If we have a series cat and a series template, the question is quickly resolved by looking at either one. It may be a bit more work, but it standardizes things. I don't see why three makes a series more than two. A duology may have fewer titles than a trilogy, but it is no less a series. -- 18:46, 8 December 2012 (UTC)
 * A duology may be no less a series than a trilogy, but the main pages for games in two-game templates would just link back to one another (as they would in two-game categories); there used to be templates for two-game "series" on Wikipedia (including one for Dragon Spirit and Dragon Saber, which is why I originally brought up this issue on here towards the end of October) at one time, but they have all been deleted since last time I saw them, possibly because they were decided against by the Wikipedia administrators for that same reason I have mentioned. Namcorules (talk) 16:36, 10 December 2012 (UTC)
 * I don't see a problem. I also couldn't find the examples you think you saw on Wikipedia, but it's not relevant, since we aren't Wikipedia. A series cat can have additional details not described on each main page of the duology. The template reassures users that we are aware that there are only two in the series. Plus, if a third game does get developed, it can more easily be added to the template. Creating series templates for individual games - now that's something that we shouldn't do. But for two it still makes sense to me (I prefer using the nav at the bottom, rather than looking at the next in the series in the infobox, because I'm not always sure how many games are in a series). -- 18:19, 10 December 2012 (UTC)
 * The examples that I saw on Wikipedia (but I have to admit it was a few years ago) were for Tank Battalion and Tank Force, Bosconian and Blast Off, Pole Position and Pole Position II, Baraduke and Bakutotsu Kijūtei, Sky Kid and Sky Kid Deluxe, also Thunder Ceptor and 3-D Thunder Ceptor II; I also never said we were Wikipedia, or that we should create series templates for one-shot games (even though my personal favourite Namco game, Beraboh Man, which happens to be a one-shot, did get a spin-off in the form of Pistol Daimyo no Bōken). However, I do prefer using the "followed by" and "preceded by" links in the infobox, even though I did create templates for the, , , , and  series in October - but all six of those series were comprised of three or more titles. Namcorules (talk) 20:00, 10 December 2012 (UTC)
 * I understand your preference, but others may share mine, too. I don't have a justification to rule against duologies. I don't see why leaving out duology templates and categories is a good idea. To stay consistent with the layout of our other games that are in series, we should continue to create series templates and categories for duologies. The template my be redundant, in a way, to the infobox navigations, but it provides more info than the infobox. -- 01:30, 11 December 2012 (UTC)

You never know when a third game might be made. A lot of these games also come as part of compilations which can be included in the template. -- Prod (talk) 04:13, 11 December 2012 (UTC)
 * You're right, Prod; a third game could be released at any time, just like how Rally-X Arrangement and Dig Dug Arrangement were released as part of Namco Classics Collection Vol. 2 in 1996, when both series had only been comprised of two games for fifteen and eleven years respectively. The Bosconian, Pole Position, Baraduke, Sky Kid and Dragon Spirit games have also appeared on various Namco Museum compilations for the Sony PlayStation over the years - along with Assault and its Japan-only upgrade Assault Plus. Namcorules (talk) 09:33, 11 December 2012 (UTC)

Controls tables - REDUX
Bringing this up again. There are discussions all over the place about it. But Skizzerz has put together a mockup here. Lets pick one and update the guide. Personally, I prefer the first or the last ones. -- Prod (talk) 02:16, 25 December 2012 (UTC)
 * I personally like the last one the best (Action column on left, with right-aligned text). For a left-to-right language, we start reading from the left hand side of the page/screen. Therefore, let us consider what I think would be the most common use case for a controls page -- trying to find a control to do a particular thing because you don't know/forgot it. I don't have any sort of hard evidence that this is the most common use case for a controls page/listing, but I can't really think of any other use cases. For that particular use case, you are first searching for what you are trying to accomplish, and then how to accomplish it. When reading left-to-right, then, you would like the first thing in each row you read to be the what so you then can make a decision on whether or not to continue reading that row more quickly than if you had to first scan to the end of the row to determine the what and then look backwards on the same row for the how. So by having the Action column as the leftmost column, it requires less work to find information by what first and how second, and thus is faster. As for left-aligned vs right-aligned, I prefer right-aligned because it leads more into the table itself and is just more aesthetically pleasing (I could go into another not-researched usability talk of the benefits of right-aligned vs left-aligned for the first column based on personal experience/opinion, but this is already getting pretty lengthy). -- 04:02, 25 December 2012 (UTC)