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I welcome any and all feedback here, so please post your thoughts. Thank you.

Archived discussions:

Two new featured guides

Hi Proc, can you take a look at http://strategywiki.org/wiki/StrategyWiki:Featured_guides/Current_requests and see if they can be upgraded now? I think they are both worthy. Thanks! --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 20:55, 7 January 2014 (UTC)

I know this is silly, but since I haven't done it before, I can do it? I am unsure of whether or not we need more support before making them featured. --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 18:55, 9 January 2014 (UTC)
Hey NMH, two things. First and foremost, I have absolute trust in you, so if you want to do it, I fully support you. Second, I apologize for not responding sooner, this has been a crazy week. However, I will have some free time over the weekend, when I can scrutinize the guides. I doubt that I will find anything that would prevent me from supporting the nominations, but if you don't mind waiting, I can take a look and officially add my support, then you can go ahead an promote the guides once I add my sig. Does that sound good to you? Procyon 00:15, 10 January 2014 (UTC)


Zelda: A Link to the Past

On Zelda: A Link to the Past I can't get past dark world level 5 because the block that I push off can't be pushed over the tile with the button for some reason. Level 5 in Dark World is the lake and ice level. I can only push the block once, but in order to move it over the tile with the button I need to push it three times. What is going on? Qewr4231 (talk) 08:33, 11 January 2014 (UTC)


simcity societies scenarios walkthroughs

hi procyon, well i started to do some work in the SCSD guides as it isn't a very popular game and the section is REALLY very abandoned, personally, your deletion request really freaked me out, I already read your warnings and recommendations so the article should be clean now, if there is something still lacking, please help fixing it as i am not a native speaker and the wild typo can suddenly appear sometimes, that's all by now i'll go back to expanding the walkthroughs.ErnstCornell (talk) 23:43, 11 January 2014 (UTC)

Bionic Commando (NES) nominated for featured guide

Please add your support/comments to StrategyWiki:Featured guides/Current requests. Thank you. --

Yeah, no problem. I know how busy we all are, so if I don't see a response for a couple of days I figure I might as well go ahead with "being bold" as we say here. I haven't messed with featured guides in a long time so I was at first hesitant, which is why I asked you to do it at first. Just let me know if you notice any big changes that should be discussed. --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 21:59, 16 January 2014 (UTC)

Mega Man

The issue is that it's a four boss run, without any healing. Ice Man is the most powerful of the Robot Masters in terms of attack power, and is deadly on his own. The player will have already fought Bomb Man and Fire Man, and will likely be injured, and they need to have enough health to survive Guts Man afterwards. It doesn't make any sense to suggest a skill-based strategy in that circumstance, since failing to dodge leads to taking a lot of damage. The thing about the Robot Masters' stages is that you don't need to have mastered the strategy for beating them in order to defeat them, you just need to win once to clear their stage. In my case, I took a break from the game for a week or two after beating the Robot Masters since Yellow Devil was a major pain, and then came back and finished it off, so fighting Ice Man was hardly fresh (I was playing on the 3DS, which allows me to suspend play). I get that if you put a lot of time into building the skills to fight Ice Man, you're going to feel that you should use them, but there isn't any reason whatsoever to do that the second time round, since once you've killed him you can flee the scene. --Poppy Appletree (talk) 04:28, 20 January 2014 (UTC)

Data loss

Well, looks like I'll have to save everything I do in a text document in case this happens again. I'll just look up a video of the quests to re-do them. And if I can think of anything, I'll let you guys know. --PirateIzzy (talk) 04:32, 14 February 2014 (UTC)

Alright, I'll keep that in mind, thanks. Text documents work pretty good for me too though. --PirateIzzy (talk) 02:57, 15 February 2014 (UTC)

Pokemon red world map

Excuse me, can I please ask why the complete world map of pokemon red was removed? I thought it would be a great inclusion since players could use it to follow the walkthrough better. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 50.148.26.78 (talkcontribs) .

Because it was redundant to the content already available on the site. Maps for all locations are available on the pages which reference them. Why would we ask users to visit a different site and switch back and forth between windows and tabs when all of the information is cleanly presented on one page? We're not a showcase for other site's features, no matter how cool they may be. Off-site linking should only occur if the content is out of scope for the site. Procyon 00:26, 6 March 2014 (UTC)
ah, okay. That makes sense. Well cheers, and thanks for the great job on the walkthrough. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 50.148.26.78 (talkcontribs) .

Support

Thanks so much for supporting me on Super Mario Bros. 2 and finishing up Super Mario Advance that helped out a lot :) - RodKimble (talk) 20:20, 21 March 2014 (UTC)

Donkey Kong walkthrough adjustments

Talk:Donkey Kong/Walkthrough. A new user brought up some issues. Appears to be version differences related. Please respond, thanks. --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 17:10, 28 March 2014 (UTC)

Pokemon crystal

What did you mean by this diff? Crystal shares the same ToC as Gold and Silver... --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 05:20, 31 March 2014 (UTC)

Hey Notmyhandle (talk · contribs), I know they do, I was just trying to exclude the use of the Template:T:Sidebar for only Crystal-exclusive information, much like how you're highlighting the instances of Super Mario Advance information. In that particular edit, the sidebox a) wasn't about information exclusive to Crystal and b) wasn't about anything that wasn't mentioned elsewhere (in the items section) and that the player couldn't figure out on their own anyhow. So I just chopped that one instead of trying to find a new home for the info. Procyon 23:39, 31 March 2014 (UTC)
The only thing useful from it was "You can pick up Paralyze Heal on the right side of the first floor.", which wasn't mentioned in the items section. Added. Thanks. --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 02:06, 1 April 2014 (UTC)

Picross e series naming conventions

Hi Proc, I need some help. Jupiter corporation lists their games on their site with the following typeset format: PICROSS e#. Standard naming conventions for titles would display it as Picross E#. However, I started a naming trend here like so: Picross e#, which follows sentence case. Which one should we go with? --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 17:04, 31 March 2014 (UTC)

Notmyhandle (talk · contribs), Prod (talk · contribs) and I have always both felt that the best policy was to match whatever was on the title screen and/or box artwork as closely as possible. So if they user a lowercase e, I believe we should as well. A redirect with a capital E is always welcome, but if the official name incorporates a lowercase e, than the official guide name should as well. As for the capitalization of "Picross" that one is a little tougher. It feels stupid to follow one convention (using the lowercase e) but not another (putting Picross in all caps). That one is a little bit more of a judgement call. I guess the two choices are between Picross e and PICROSS e, and personally, I would go with the first, just to make it easier for people, and redirect the second. Procyon 23:47, 31 March 2014 (UTC)
I was thinking the same thing. Boy are our standards weird. Sentence case + typesetting/signature formatting. Thanks for the thoughts. --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 00:29, 1 April 2014 (UTC)

Image categories clarifications

Accept homebrew/hacked/ripoff/clone image files as part of the original specific-game image category?

Hi Procyon! During my works on swapping GIFs for PNGs for the wiki (and compressing to the max), I came across these two pages: Donkey Kong/Versions and Pac-Man/Versions. What they have in common is that they feature homebrews, hacks, ripoffs, and clones of the original game. In addition to uploading the PNG files, I was adding the appropriate specific-guide name categories into their pages that weren't implemented until around 2008; adding on images that were uploaded in around 2006. I came across one of those particular images and it stopped my tracks.

These images are uploaded and added to the page as part of the game page as a showcase of influences that the game has made through the actions of homebrews, hacks, ripoffs, and clones being created; but do not have a game-specific image category entry (with the exception of homebrew images of Pac-Man for the Atari 2600, but curiously not for the Atari 7800). Therefore, it would be appropriate that they have their own game-specific image category and their own game guide page. However, it doesn't seem that they would have their own game guide pages at this time to this setup of displaying the content info. So logically, if an image is uploaded to that specific game in that page, it must have the game-specific category under the same name (File:DKing_TRS80_Stage1.png for Donkey Kong and Category:Donkey Kong images, not Donkey King and Category:Donkey King images) due to the category description's phrasing "Images pertaining to <game name>."; unless it must be referred to the game itself, and related connections (like perhaps remakes), and not the game guide page in the wiki.

Should those distinctive images be categorized with their own image category? I am saying this because their only category they have is Category:Screenshots, as they don't have a distinctive category for themselves right now. --RAP (talk) 10:11, 5 April 2014 (UTC)

If the image is exclusively used on a guide, then it is obviously categorized for that game. E.g. File:DK 2600 Stage2.png should have Category:Donkey Kong images on it (it didn't; I added it). If a version has an exclusive guide here, then its image can be categorized with that (e.g. Category:Rayman: Raving Rabbids (Wii) images). If the image pertains to two guides, then you could put one or both, whatever makes sense. If two or more guides have been combined, we are not going to separate them and thus they do not need their own main page, nor their own image category. Note that an image can be used from a different game, on any guide page, as an example of something, and not require a game-specific category. That category is for the game it came from. E.g. you could compare title screens for similarities or something, but you wouldn't put the same game-specific category on both, that would be illogical. --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 23:07, 12 April 2014 (UTC)
Notmyhandle (talk · contribs): Thanks for your input, I appreciate more clarity for me to understand better; however, Procyon already answered this back in my talk page some time ago before you responded.
On the sentence about an image that has more than two categories: this means that File:PM_Blinky.png, which has three game-specific categories (that were added over the years since it's existance from the history): Category:Ms. Pac-Man images, Category:Jr. Pac-Man images, and Category:Super Pac-Man images; should only have Category:Pac-Man images instead of having all four categories altogether (which curiously isn't categorized under as the originator that was followed by the sequels)?
Does this mean that this image arbitrarily doesn't belong to any other game despite reappearing in the same form, and only categorized by it's originating game? If I visit Category:Ms. Pac-Man images with this in effect, with only one guide-specific category (which would be Category:Pac-Man images), and File:PM_Blinky.png is nowhere to be found; it implies that Blinky doesn't exist in Ms. Pac Man. The same thing will happen if the image doesn't have a game-specific category. --RAP (talk) 23:55, 12 April 2014 (UTC)
RAP (talk · contribs), it is not the policy to update the categories of every image whenever they are re-used in a different guide. That being said, it's also not forbidden. An image must have the category of the first game guide it appeared in. An image may have any additional guide categories if it's being reused. Whether you take the time and effort to do that is optional, and it will be appreciated, but it is not required. Procyon 00:13, 13 April 2014 (UTC)

Create Category:Cropped screenshots? and confusion between Category:Icons & Category:Sprites

Hi again Procyon! On my continuing adventures of GIF to PNG converting and image categorization. I came across Miracle Warriors, which you created. What I noticed is that some of the images like overworld locations, NPC interactions, and an image of confronting the final boss; while they have Category:Miracle Warriors images, they don't have a general image category (like Category:Screenshots, Category:Sprites, or Category:Icons). Would this permit a new category like "Category:Cropped screenshots"? It might sound silly, but the word "screenshot" implies that it is an image that is screencaptured without any visual modifications (like cropping, adding markers, or highlighting areas); skimming Category:Screenshots's gallery, most of the images are categorized correctly under there that follows that I said.

On a related note: In Miracle Warriors/Items, after collecting all GIF files to convert, the same situation arises: no general image category. The first thought was to categorize it under Category:Sprites because they are 2D (usually pixelated) image art assets that came directly ripped from the game; then I found out that Category:Icons exist. Seeing both of them, and skimming down a load of gallery images, I got utterly confused on which category to use. While Category:Sprites is more consistent, Category:Icons is a mess. Originating from MarioWiki, a category for icons do not exist, so they get slotted under the sprites category. I'm not entirely sure what to do...it doesn't help that achievement-related images are mixed into the mess. This is a situation that even Candy Crush Saga has a sprite sheet of the candies in original humongous size; does shrinking them down (if we make a guide for the game) mean we have to create Category:Cropped sprites?

I really tend to overthink at these kinds of things when they are in question, because I want to continue doing the work with the amount of clarification I should receive; detail and design-oriented at times, making sure something has a reason. --RAP (talk) 04:02, 12 April 2014 (UTC)

Category:Icons are for icons. If you are unsure, then it doesn't matter, just pick the one you prefer. Sprite makes more sense for items that appear as collectible power-ups. Whereas icon is better for representations shown only in menus. I usually categorize character portraits as Category:Artwork. "Cropped screenshots" is the same thing as Screenshots to us. So no new category. We do not differentiate modified and unmodified screenshots. --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 23:07, 12 April 2014 (UTC)

Create more game specific images by content type subcategories?

Hi Proycon, when I joined the wiki long ago, I found out that:

I find it interesting that it hasn't been enforced in full force by seeing the very small amount of category links. Does this only apply with a ton of images under a specific content type? My apologies if it overwhelms you, would it be more preferable to move some of the discussions to StrategyWiki:Staff lounge?--RAP (talk) 08:29, 12 April 2014 (UTC)

OK, this was quite a lot to deal with, I'm just going to tackle it all here. @RAP (talk · contribs), you are overthinking this to some extent. Here's the deal (and we may need to have a bigger discussion about this in the Staff Lounge, or the guide may need to be updated.) Notmyhandle (talk · contribs) may be able to help me with some of the history on the site, but the whole image categorization issue is a bit of a quagmire for the community. When the site started, we used those generalized catagories; sprites, artwork, icons, etc. Some people used them exclusively, some people didn't use them at all, and some people used specialized categories like the Castlevania II categories.
After a while, the whole thing became a mess, and people didn't agree on what was a sprite vs. an icon, and what was a screenshot vs. a map, etc. At some point (although I can't precisely remember when), the community decided that it would be far more beneficial for the organization of the images if they were organized by game title first, and then if applicable, a secondary category like screenshot. In fact, the whole sprite category fell out of favor entirely, although efforts to wipe it out have obviously been unsuccessful. The problem is, 10 or 20 years down the road (if the site still exists hopefully), if you visit Category:Screenshots, you're going to be presented with a list of over 100,000+ screenshots that you can only navigate in alphabetical order, 500 at a time at best. This is completely impractical. On the other hand, each guide will only have a fraction of that many images (of any category), so it's much easier to navigate through a guide's image category (assuming you can find it, but any image in a guide should help you find that guide's image category.)
Therefore, categorizing each image by its intended guide is presumably far more useful for users to search for similar and related images than the secondary umbrella categories which are ballooning beyond practical navigation. So with respect to your question, should you be applying those secondary categories? To me personally, it's less important, and somewhat arbitrary which ones you use (e.g. icon vs sprite). Does that mean you shouldn't apply them if you want to? No, by all means, please apply them if you'd like to. But that's why you may find a couple of images, for example from me, with a primary guide image category, but no second category when what I've uploaded doesn't cleanly fall into a label like screenshot or artwork. Even if I chose one, I'm basically just tossing the image into a ridiculously oversized bin where it's going to drown in a sea of similarly categorized images. In other words, as long as the game guide image category is there, how much use does the secondary category have? It doesn't hurt to have it, but it doesn't help tremendously either. But this entire response should really be regarded as just my $0.02. Like I said, it may be necessary to raise a larger discussion in the Staff Lounge. The only thing I would caution against: don't let getting hung up on policy prevent you from being otherwise productive around the site. Procyon 00:02, 13 April 2014 (UTC)
Procyon (talk · contribs): I wouldn't mind doing repetitive maintenance for this type of project. I jam a lot of edits of adding the categories in a batch at a time (which also includes uploading images - without Special:UploadWizard, because that thing looks infinitely more complicated than the old Special:MultipleUpload). Having it game-specific categories by content type would be a great idea. But yeah, we should have a big discussion at the Staff Lounge. I'll probably be pre-doing the future procedure that I suggested with the PNG versions of the images, starting with Category:Miracle Warriors maps, Category:Miracle Warriors screenshots, and Category:Miracle Warriors sprites and not have general image categories. --RAP (talk) 00:43, 13 April 2014 (UTC)
RAP (talk · contribs), I am fine with that as long as the over-arching guide image category is still included, as I prefer being able to see all of the images contained by a guide in a single category, regardless of sub-type. I would not want to lose the ability to see that. Procyon 00:58, 13 April 2014 (UTC)
Procyon (talk · contribs): Deal; it would be too much of a hassle to go into yet another subcategory to check the contents. Didn't I recall that DPL can also generate galleries (or links) that contain Category:<type of content> and Category:<game title> images? It'll probably be too taxing to the servers if they have to retrieve the contents and generate it on the spot. --RAP (talk) 01:12, 13 April 2014 (UTC)
The history of our image categories is unimportant. I don't think we need a "big discussion", but we may want to move this to staff lounge (though I don't think it really matters what page we talk about it on; all staff could just come to this page for this discussion). What we need is to focus our efforts to boil this down. You both did well so far. A written, simplified policy (which we can put at StrategyWiki:Guide/Image_naming#Image_categories) will help us to move forward and reduce the need for repeat discussions. Procyon (talk · contribs) and RAP (talk · contribs) just identified all of the types of categories that exist. We just need to decide what is best.
  • Broad categories like Category:Screenshots are not useful for finding relevant images, but it is good for identifying what type of image it is, whether or not we find that necessary is a point to be considered. I think we agree that these are useless. Everyone can tell what a screenshot is. Whether its a sprite, item, or icon doesn't matter because you will just be segmenting broad categories into other broad categories. I support their removal. If decided, we can have someone run a bot to remove all broad category references so no one has to waste time making thousands of edits.
  • For non-guide images, we have specific categories, like company logos, to keep them from being in the uncategorized files list. No need to change that (it is also something neither of you brought up, but should be remembered).
  • Guide-specific sub-cats are not necessary. This is something I am now firm on after writing about this for the last ~20-30 min. The question is, should we allow them? I think - no. Like broad categories, these are a waste of time. I feel like they are useful for finding similar images, however, I am having trouble proving that to myself. For example, icons within the same game (e.g. Category:MapleStory icon images). This type of sub-categorisation is optional, but the point is, its not exactly arbitrary. These often are created for ongoing maintenance and organizational purposes, but I feel like that is a terrible mistake. It creates a pattern of infinite sub-categorisation. PirateIzzy (talk · contribs) may have some perspective on that. Although, I created the MapleStory icon images cat, as well as Category:Icons itself, I feel like these do not help us at all. Sure, they are grouped, but who cares? Under what circumstances is this beneficial? I can't think of any.
  • Of note, image categories do not seem to order the images in any way. Perhaps by date they were categorized? --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 02:16, 13 April 2014 (UTC)
In regards to PNG image replacements for GIF files, I feel like RAP is wasting his time and ours (since you are not a sysop, we have to patrol all of your image edits at this time). We have no need of image compression at this time (bandwidth and HDD space is not a problem), which if we did care about, could be done all at once from the back end. The ONLY reason to replace an image is if it is not working. --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 02:16, 13 April 2014 (UTC)

Notmyhandle (talk · contribs): Angling on the discussion of my adventures of GIF -> PNG, please refer to my talk page for this discussion between me and Procyon. I remain standing firm in benefiting users (and the wiki) visiting pages with less bandwidth use downloading and rendering images as much as possible, like this edit (which for one example, it didn't need compression; thumbnailed image: 15KB, original-size image: 4KB!). The replacing of PNGs from GIFs that still functions properly is a bonus of my efforts. I replaced GIFs (broken and non-broken) under the assumption that the use of GIFs are limited permanently due to not displaying thumbnailed GIFs (if it is not fixed at all), which allows me to compress them into converted PNG and upload them because it bypasses the 50+% PNG compression compromise. Even if it is fixed, is there still a use for GIFs besides animation if PNGs are supposed to be used instead? (I heard .webm is blowing up in usage recently, but that's for another discussion.)

Regarding the wiki having no problem with hard drive space; in my talk page, Procyon (talk · contribs) has said that uploading existing compressed PNGs adds space to the wiki database, which would make backup procedures longer (which we later came to a compromise to let me compress existing PNGs 50+%); so I have conflicting info from you two on which one is correct. --RAP (talk) 04:04, 13 April 2014 (UTC)

Database space is minimally used up when uploading a new image, as it's just a new revision of the File: page. Uploading a new version of the file will archive the old version, so no space saving for the server in either case. It does add more files to archive and backup each time (we're have a few gigs of media files). I don't think it's a bad thing to have smaller compressed images, but it seems like a lot of manual work. Webm is being used more and more, but I'd rather we leave that to longer videos, not animations that only loop a few frames.
As for the thumbnailing issues, I'm still trying to solve that. Mediawiki changed the way they thumbnailed files (especially in the last version) and lots of people have been having similar issues. The fix they suggested worked for a bit, but significantly impacted the performance of the site. I'm going to be updating to newer versions of the apps on the server soon and I'm hoping that will help.
In my view we have two orthogonal sets of image categories. Category:Guide-specific images and everything else in Category:Images. The former is for keeping images for a specific guide together for organization purposes. I don't see a problem with having subcategories per game within the guide-specific images, especially with games like MapleStory which have hundreds of images. The latter are more for tagging, rather than organization. Removing some of the existing image categories has been discussed (and acted upon) a few times. The last discussion is on the forums. I think the next step we had listed there was to merge all the achievement/trophy/award categories into one. If you want to do a major change to the image categories, that's something that should be discussed on the Staff lounge. -- Prod (talk) 16:19, 13 April 2014 (UTC)
Thank you, Prod (talk · contribs), for your input. I think you are right: categories like Category:Company logos are also useless. That type of info can just be written in the description. I guess I will start a thread in staff lounge if no one has yet. A simpler image categorization policy will reduce our nagging of new users and make it easier for them and us to add content.
RAP (talk · contribs): all I'm saying is that the ratio of bandwidth you save compared to how much time you spend is terrible (e.g. 5MB per view for 30 minutes of work?). I mean, who is affected here? Who needs the most help. StrategyWiki has plenty of space and bandwidth to spare (that does not justify not working to compress your work before submitting). AFAIK, Prod and PRocyon don't care if a couple extra MB of data is used up, both in storage and transfer. My issue is that you're spending all this of this time on work that has very little significance. For example compare "value of edits": adding new content vs. optimization. Adding new content can mean the difference between hundreds of viewers and none. Optimization means the difference between paying a little more for hosting or not. You would have to spend days of your life doing optimizations to make a difference, whereas an hour or two of new content can be worth a lot. Also, the existence of a guide can mean getting new editors, as 99% of our viewers come here initially based on games they are currently playing. Also, your project is infinitely large in scope. By the time you finish, new content will come out. Also, if you are adjusting gallery widths and such, there's also the chance that someone won't understand why you did that, and then they will undo the change, or if an image isn't 100% correct, someone will upload a non-compressed version over the top. Are you really going to patrol every image that comes in and replace them all if they aren't as good as the ones you can make? --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 17:11, 14 April 2014 (UTC)
Notmyhandle (talk · contribs): I guess I'll be doozing off into the relative unknown and work on something more constructive and beneficial for the wiki... like table optimization, hoarding content, or poking StrategyWiki's gaping and cracked holes... I poked at those issues and brought it up directly to Procyon here in this talk page while performing GIF -> PNG in spite of your reasoning... Alright, I'll stop the processing thing since Prod will eventually find the GIF-thumbnailing problem, and fix it, and the GIF-thumbnailed images will be restored back to normal; thus I move on from that. It'll be way more faster than me manually converting all the already broken GIF-thumbnailed images (and non-broken GIFs as a bonus) displayed in such respective game pages into compressed PNG images, and hope visitors will not mind these issues during this duration. --RAP (talk) 07:29, 15 April 2014 (UTC)
Thank you for your help. Don't take it personally. It's not your responsibility to "save" the wiki. For one, repeat users know to click on a broken thumbnail to view the image, so problem solved (temporarily). Also, if you are working on a guide for something you really like, then go ahead and replace the broken images with working ones. We want you to enjoy this place and find a piece of it that you can find pride in and sort of call your own. I just think it is a waste of your time to think you're going to go through and make 100,000 edits (it would take you like 10 years) on something that may be automatically fixed in the future. --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 15:56, 15 April 2014 (UTC)
User:Notmyhandle, and User:Procyon {responding from my talk page}: I suppose. The only other reason (that I didn't mention earlier, and not in my ideas list) is that there is currently speculation on internet providers enforcing bandwidth caps in a later period of time, which could reduce accessibility to the website; with certain countries already doing such things (which I do not recall the names of the companies, all but perhaps all big ISPs from Canada).
It's not necessarily about decreasing load times to both the wiki and user, it's limiting accessibility to the wiki for the user through bandwidth caps. The only way to drastically cut down bandwidth usage is disabling images; it could mean that those not having images being rendered after downloading, we may have to introduce a description of what the image looks like in the page, not just in the image page itself (which requires an extra click from the user and more bandwidth use).
In the future, if the majority of our visitors (since I do not have internal access to demographics, I used Alexa for estimates) have bandwidth caps, we may have to appeal to them by recovering the amount of accessibility lost from the implementation of bandwidth caps as much as possible; that includes recurring editors of the wiki.
Anyway, off to table presentation optimization, and making sure all four skins fit correctly! Oh, and before you ask, no, I didn't scan all the game pages for them, I already did through here; racking around around 1800 pages in the waitlist. Some of them will not be edited after a critical check (and thus remove them from the list). --RAP (talk) 00:19, 17 April 2014 (UTC)
For the desktop user, I don't think bandwidth caps are that significant a concern for simple web browsing, which only uses up a few megabytes per session (less if cached). If the user is really worried, they can disable images from their web browser or switch their preferences to only show very small thumbnails.
Mobile users would have much more significant issues, where even 1 GB of data is considered a lot. For those I'm working on getting the MobileFrontend extension working properly. It has the option of disabling images very easily. -- Prod (talk) 03:36, 17 April 2014 (UTC)

I was attacked

Hi Procyon. My user page was vandalized by an anonymous. It's quite disturbing. Was I the only target or is it more widespread? I'm telling you because you are an administrator. --Abacos (talk) 14:54, 5 April 2014 (UTC)

I remembered the recent changes page. I could see that attacks are going on. If the vandal targeted me, it was probably just by chance, or just because I've been active in the last few hours. --Abacos (talk) 15:01, 5 April 2014 (UTC)
Given the randomized text and that it foings around on random pages, it's a (broken) spambot that somehow thinks those pages can be used to advertise. It gets worse on less patrolled wikis. --Sigma 7 (talk) 18:45, 5 April 2014 (UTC)

Indeed, I was wondering about the reason behind vandalizing the website in this way. Thanks for the explanation. --Abacos (talk) 19:07, 5 April 2014 (UTC)

Mario Bros. 2

What is Mario Bros. 2? It is in the Mario series template. A stub would be handy for now. --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 21:47, 5 April 2014 (UTC)

Oh yeah, I saw that and forgot all about it. Thanks for reminding me. I don't know what the original author's intent behind "Mario Bros. 2" was, since as far as I know, no such game exists. There is a Japanese FDS title known as "Kaette Kita Mario Bros," which was released for the Europe NES on a cart called "Return of Mario Bros." but all it is, is a more faithful adaptation of the arcade version than the original Mario Bros. release. Perhaps that's what they meant, but in any event, it should be folded into the main Mario Bros. article, so I'm pretty sure "Mario Bros. 2" can be removed. Procyon 23:35, 5 April 2014 (UTC)
@Notmyhandle (talk · contribs), I think I solved the mystery of "Mario Bros. 2". I think it refers to this game. But it's completely unofficial, and does not belong in the template. Still, it's pretty cool that someone ported a Game & Watch game that early on. Procyon 13:57, 8 April 2014 (UTC)
Ah, thank you. I created the Mario Bros. II page and removed it from the template. Wikipedia has a series of unofficial Mario games. Maybe we should, too? --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 17:02, 8 April 2014 (UTC)

External content questions

Long ago, I asked some of the questions to Moydow (talk · contribs) when I gathered up a boat load of links for the wiki (and still do), but couldn't answer them due to lack of knowledge, so now I'm going to ask the person who runs the website, you Procyon. I'm asking you such questions because after reading most of the StrategyWiki:Guide pages, I felt that there were certain angles that weren't tackled, or not clarified in detail:

  • If say a website that is dedicated to hosting walkthroughs/cheats/tips went defunct, taken offline, or got rid all of their content to start anew, would their own produced guides be usable? What about user-submitted guides? Such of the website's content cannot be found normally in any way unless it is archived like Archive.org. If a website doesn't want to be archived in the first place, they would've used robots.txt to block their web crawler, or ask the archiving website a request to exclude the website from being archived.
    • Would this apply the same with userpages like Geocities (think game shrines back then!) or anything similar?
  • As someone who watches Let's Play videos (and sometimes multiplayer videos), is it viable to use the content and convert it into writing form? The difference is that one has to interpret how the player in the video goes through the game, which is slower than importing written content and wikify it. While they are made as entertainment for the viewer, they indirectly give info on how the player goes through the game since the player's actions are the property of their videos, not the game company that made the game. An example is YouTube user Northenlion on playing Binding of Issac, which I'm on Episode 10; he has made over 600 episodes consisting of videos clocking 30-50 minutes each since September 2011. Interestingly, I found out that the wiki has embbed videos (without ads, and with ads) back to it's source, as StrategyWiki:Guide/External_links has informed me.
    • Is the use of the content factored whether or not they make money off creating videos through ads?
    • Would the same be applied in a walkthrough-intended direction?
  • Speaking of Archive.org, because the website is a 501(c)(3) non-profit, would the archived content (not the webpages, but individual files) be usable? I find it fascinating that the website has an archive most of the G4TV videos (web-only content, and the shows themselves) after they have announced they have shut down, with the staff laid off (even though the website G4TV.com is still there, pending it's disappearance in the future). I'm not sure if they had content takedowns because I don't check the individual files section very much (and just focused on browsing archived webpages), but I'm sure they have to do so due to being prominent in the internet. They don't make money off hosting the content due to relying on donations to keep them stable.

Such answers of clarifications are greatly appreciated for the continuation of contributions of the wiki right now, and in the future; thus it is so that there is no misunderstanding of what external content is allowed or not allowed to be used as the wiki continues to exist. --RAP (talk) 07:35, 8 April 2014 (UTC)

@RAP (talk · contribs), I'll do my best to respond to each of these, but let me know if I overlook anything.
  1. Concerning offline walkthroughs/cheats/tips; Cheats do not need to be credited. Tips usually do not unless they are substantial (more than a sentence or two). Walkthroughs are another matter. If a walkthrough has a submitted author credit, we are obligated to make a "good faith" effort to get in touch with the author and ask for permission before we thrust someone's work into the public domain. If you attempt to make contact and receive no reply, then it depends. If it appears that the author of the walkthrough and the author of the website are the same, the content can be brought to this site, with proper attribution to the original source of the walkthrough. On the other hand, if the walkthrough is contributed to the site by another user, you may only reproduce the content with that author's permission. (Circumstances may be different if it can be determined that the author is deceased.) And yes, all of the above applies to offline sites like GeoCities. As long as we can show that an effort has been made to contact an author, we are ok. Of course, if we don't hear from a user and use their content, and then subsequently reply indicating that they do not give us permission, we have to comply with the request, which can make things messy if new content has been applied on top of the old.
  2. Converting video content to written walkthrough content is completely permissible, as you are generating new intellectual content. It would be nice if the source video was mentioned in the edit summary, but it's entirely not required. The argument here is that there's little to distinguish someone else's video play through of a game, with your own personal experience with the game, since two different people playing through the same game are entirely likely to have similar play experiences from one another. You could watch the video and learn from it, then play through the game yourself repeating the actions you saw, and then go on to describe those actions on this site. Alternatively, you could skip the middle step of playing the game for yourself, and go straight from watching to describing. Including the middle step will enrich the quality of what you write, but you still have the right to describe what you saw in someone else's video, as that is your own work. The advertisement vs. non-advertisement argument is irrelevant in this case.
  3. Content from archive.org falls under the exact same rules and stipulations as my response to the first question. Archive.org's state as a non-profit does not change our responsibility to at least attempt to reach out to the original content authors and attempt to gain permission for the rights to reproduce the content, expressly because we are not classified as a non-profit. The only case where we are not required to seek authorization is when the content is already made available through a compatible license (CC-BY-SA 3.0), in which case it is assumed that the permission has already been sought and obtained, and we are merely obligated to maintain the attribution to the original author of the content.
That should just about cover every question you asked, but let me know if I missed anything, or if you still have further questions. Procyon 13:57, 8 April 2014 (UTC)

Hi Procyon, here are another round of questions (actually it's just 1 question with 2 sub-questions) worth tackling further:

  • Regarding walkthrough-like content in the form of text or writing, would the same be applied under a user comment or post from a forum or blog? It may sound like I'm stretching and dispersing what is something that can be copyrighted, and something that can just be a thought voiced using a social platform, but this is more crystal clear clarification I need to know before I will add more content to the wiki in the future.
    • Is just creating a comment, opinion or thought copyrighted by the user?
    • If someone in a game topic / blog post puts out specific details of the person's thoughts on the game they are playing at the moment, or gives advice to a struggling player; are they indirectly producing their own walkthrough guide?

This is pretty much it for a while, until other things hidden from my eyes suddenly pops up of course. --RAP (talk) 06:23, 11 April 2014 (UTC)

The rule of thumb is that all written content will have to be re-written to avoid plagiarism. All submissions by people (even anonymous) are copyrighted by the website it is located at. That means that some blogs may take ownership. Sites like Facebook claim ownership of all content. Guide sites take credit for all submissions, though some allow users to self-credit and license their content out however they like. This website takes ownership of your submissions, but it is licensed under CC-BY-SA. --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 16:08, 11 April 2014 (UTC)
@RAP (talk · contribs), Notmyhandle (talk · contribs) pretty much hit the nail on the head. It's not so much about whether a post on a blog or facebook is copyrighted or not. Chances are, even if they were, you could sneak the content on here, and no one would even notice what you did. The point is that it's just bad policy to reproduce anyone's work without seeking permission first. Presumably, if the post is small enough, it shouldn't take much effort to re-word the post, however slightly, and make it your own work. That happens all the time. And if it's generic enough (e.g. "The coin is in the third block.") so that anyone could have constructed the same sentence, then there isn't even any need to rewrite it. But always air on the safe side; When in doubt, get permission or rewrite it. Obviously, if the licensing is present and compatible, there's no doubt, just grab it and cite the source. Procyon 19:57, 11 April 2014 (UTC)

Items Table

One thing i noticed is how some pages have fancy Item Table (like Pokémon_Gold_and_Silver/Mt._Mortar) while other only have a simple List (like this one in Pokémon_Gold_and_Silver/Whirl_Islands). Can you standardized all pages with the fancy table? Paco (talk) 08:39, 8 April 2014 (UTC)

@Paco (talk · contribs), yeah, I know, I'm just trying to lay all of the content down first, and then I was going to go back and try to standardize all of the formatting, which is a little easier to do, but a little more brain-dead as well. When I get all the way through laying in the content, I plan to go back through the guide and standardize all of the formatting. Procyon 13:57, 8 April 2014 (UTC)

Sentence case main game naming

I have quick question for you. Related to this diff I just made, would you support me if I were to change the naming standard for Lego games from LEGO to Lego? Originally it was Lego, and then I found out that LEGO is typeset, so I really thought that the games should have their company-preferred typesetting. I went and set up categories and changed page/filenames around. At this point, I think that typesetting is really just a marketing trick, and Wikipedia has all of their Lego references lower case, so it would be best to switch back to sentence case. At this point we are in the middle between having all LEGO or all Lego. --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 01:08, 15 April 2014 (UTC)

Testing notification system

Hey Prod, did you get a notification about this post? Procyon 14:37, 15 April 2014 (UTC)

I did User:Procyon. -- Prod (talk) 14:38, 15 April 2014 (UTC)
Alright, cool. For anyone who is reading, it's not necessary to use {{user}} to notify someone that you're communicating with them, it's sufficient to just use [[User:_____]]. Procyon 14:47, 15 April 2014 (UTC)

Just a reminder - SMB2 scans

Since you're pretty active this week, if you get a chance can you grab the Super Mario Bros. 2 manual and scan in the pages for me? They don't have to be 100% straight because I can rotate them myself. Thanks! --Notmyhandle (talk contribs) 05:39, 18 April 2014 (UTC)

Gotcha, thanks for the reminder. I'll try to tackle it this weekend. I have been active, but it's been in fits and spurts, whenever I can squeeze stuff in. Life's been hectic lately. Procyon 19:14, 18 April 2014 (UTC)