StrategyWiki:Guide/Navigation

As with all new viewers of sites using MediaWiki, the familiarity just isn't there. On top of that, StrategyWiki has its own default skin and policies to make things more unique and complicated for these users. Luckily as a wiki we are able to compile guides for users like these to help them better grasp and navigate sites.

Searching
Just having a database isn't good enough for people, so that's why the search function exists. There's more to searching than just typing in a string of characters, and utilizing the added features will help you narrow down your searches and reduce the amount of time you have to dig through the thousands of pages available.

Redirects
Redirects are pages that, when viewed, automatically load a different page instead. These are used for certain shortcuts, alternate game names, and common misspellings, however it's best to minimize the number of redirects that need to be created. These sort of pages shouldn't contain any content that users would want to see because the redirect will make it harder to access. For alternate game name redirects we add categories so that people that play games from different regions will still be able to find a game while browsing through categories, even if it has a different name.

When you get redirected, the only thing that will notify you that a different page loaded is the small link under the title in the upper left of the content portion of the page (see the image to the right). If you click this link, it will load the redirect page so you can directly access its content (edit the page, view additional content/categories that may be present, or access special pages via the toolbox).

To create a redirect, simply added the following line to a page:
 * 1) REDIRECT PAGENAME

Remember that when redirecting to a category the page name must be preceded by a colon to make it a link and not tag the page with that category (use Category:Nintendo GameCube, not ).

It's very easy for redirects to get out of hand, because if a redirected page redirects to another redirect... well you can see how it becomes a long chain. These sort of situations are called "double redirects" and must be corrected for simplicity.