Forum:General proposals/Archive 3

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Add Order Numbers from Ultimate's E3 video to character pages

Something I feel should be considered, since it more or less covered every character bar a small handful, is adding an entry in the info-boxes of the character pages providing their number (including Echo/Epsilon numbers where relevant). The numbers were so extensive and were pointed specifically by Sakurai, despite mostly just being the order characters appeared in (which only makes sense from one game to the next, but maybe there's a second layer to decide ordering of characters there?), so I feel that adding them is a good idea, though that's only my opinion.

After all, if no further mention of the numbers is made, they can always be removed later. Thoughts? Wixelt (talk) 18:55, 12 June 2018 (EDT)

I disagree that they have any importance outside perhaps trivia. It was just a gimmick to showcase how all characters are returning. Toomai Glittershine ??? The Brass 18:56, 12 June 2018 (EDT)

Adding "Ultimate" as part of the stage game appearance section

I have already done this to a couple of pages, but before I continue, I would like to ask if it is okay to continue with this for all of the confirmed stages in Ultimate. I am aware that not everyone wants to know about stages or, more specifically, returning stages that are appearing in a title that has not been released yet. The main purpose of asking this is to make sure that it is okay to label these familiar stages as coming to Ultimate, knowing that some people would prefer not to know until its release. Runwaymadness55 (talk) 22:24, 12 June 2018 (EDT)

If your only concern is giving away spoilers, don't let it stop you from adding info to our pages. SmashWiki is not spoiler-safe. Black Vulpine of the Furry Nation. Furries make the internets go! :3 01:55, 13 June 2018 (EDT)

Gender-neutral writing

I've noticed there's been a bit of a flurry of edits lately regarding pronoun usage for characters with multiple genders (Wii Fit Trainer, Inkling, et al). The current style is using the pronouns of the default choice (so Robin uses male pronouns and Wii Fit Trainer uses female pronouns, for example). While I agree that the entries should probably be rewritten to be more gender-neutral, I think we should use the singular they rather than "(s)he", "his/her", etc. This would make the writing less clunky in comparison while still maintaining neutrality. Any thoughts? DryKirby64 (talk) 21:34, 17 June 2018 (EDT)

I'm on Team Keep-it-as-is. It's undeniable that there is a "default" gender for nearly all characters with multiple gender options, and it is also equally undeniable that "they" still carries a strong connotation of plurality that makes pages just that much clunkier to write. Should we also include multiple profile pictures for fighters? What about Bowser Jr., whose default form is a completely different character than the other options? Do we write his article in gender neutral language to reflect that? It seems like a lot of work that just doesn't have to be done. Toymaker's Creation VelEye.png "Thank you for your contribution." 21:45, 17 June 2018 (EDT)
The way Bowser Jr. is written about usually refers to him alone, with the Koopalings mentioned in plural as needed. They're undeniably separate characters, whereas Robin, Wii Fit Trainer, etc. have alternate genders for the same character. It's worth noting that the official wording is inconsistent; some trophies are written specifically reference the character's gender, like Robin's or Wii Fit Trainer's, while others go out of their way to write gender-neutrally, such as their Final Smash trophies and Corrin's trophies. The loading screen tips for these characters are all gender-neutral, as well. However, none of them use the singular they. There's probably not an elegant gender-neutral solution, so I'm not opposed to keeping it as-is; anything is better than "his/her". DryKirby64 (talk) 22:07, 17 June 2018 (EDT)
You're right about there being no elegant gender-neutral solution, which was likely why the wiki has the policy it has now. In Japanese, there are better nongendered pronouns than we have in English, so it would make sense for the people translating the loading screen tips and trophy info using gender neutral language. We on the wiki, however, are cataloging a lot more information, and readability is very important here. The official material may not be consistent, but we should be as often as we can. So we have to make a choice: be more accurate or be easier to read. It's a small trade-off, and I don't think the small amount of accuracy gained would be worth the loss and the effort. Toymaker's Creation VelEye.png "Thank you for your contribution."
Oppose, as per Toymaker. Plus, I also think that using either style of pronoun (they, his/her or [s]he) would impact the readability of each page. Plus, although this is probably a bad oppose reason - there's the many instances each character is talked about on other pages. Do you want to be going through all those and changing them? And will those chances retain the readability of each page? I think not. Black Vulpine of the Furry Nation. Furries make the internets go! :3 21:56, 17 June 2018 (EDT)
There's no need to change it. If we ignore all other concerns that gender-neutral pronouns bring such as readability, it eventually boils down to "is referring to X as 'they' absolutely necessary? If so, does that warrant appropriate changes to every character with multiple gender options?" it's been agreed that this isn't the case, and hasn't been since the rule was conceived 4 years ago. Unless more future cases show up that require the rule to be clarified (i.e. a new char. with gender variations is announced), this shouldn't be discussed again. Also, regarding how the official games handle these characters gender-wise, remember SmashWiki isn't official, so not all (in)consistencies from official sources regarding gender or w/e should be followed by the book. Nokii (talk) 22:34, 17 June 2018 (EDT)

Stop putting in frame data/damage values/etc. in Smash Ultimate's Changes sections

I noticed in the Changes sections on character pages, people are writing down changes about frame data/move speed, damage and knockback values, hitbox alterations, launch trajectories, all that specific move detail. A reminder that what we seen at E3 was just a demo and is not fully reflective of the released game; first we don't even know how old the demo was (stuff we seen may have already been outdated), and farther balance adjustments are going to be made. All these values are extremely liable to be altered by the actual released game (remember the Smash 4 E3 2013 demo match where Mega Man's down smash was multi-hitting and dealt over 40% uncharged?), and putting such values in now are misleading readers on how they will be in the released game. As such, any changes about these sort of details should be scrubbed from the character pages and kept off until we actually have the released game in our hands. Keep the changes limited to actual new moves, animations, and mechanical changes (e.g. a move no longer making a character helpless), stuff that will realistically not be changing by release. Omega Tyrant TyranitarMS.png 23:18, 27 June 2018 (EDT)

This also goes for such changes seen in any of the trailers, those are footage from old versions of the game (with even some pretty apparent bugs seen like Lemmy's face disappearing in the roster reveal trailer) and a lot of the frame data observed is just as liable to be changed by the release version. Omega Tyrant TyranitarMS.png 23:34, 27 June 2018 (EDT)
Support. Completely agree with you. Additionally, some people aren't even taking the increased damage in 1v1s into account when they list damage changes (not to mention it appears to not apply under certain conditions, and even this might change in the final game), and knockback changes are harder to determine with the new launch speed. 034.png DracoRex, Creator of the Land 23:40, 27 June 2018 (EDT)
Support. It was mentioned also on the first Nintendo Treehouse demo by Sakurai that those things "may" change in the future, which as shown in the past means they probably will change. [1] Unknown the Hedgehog (talk) 23:43, 27 June 2018 (EDT)
Support. I don't even think anything more even needs to be said. Black Vulpine of the Furry Nation. Furries make the internets go! :3 00:59, 28 June 2018 (EDT)
Oppose. I don't think not having detailed change data would be any better than having it. The demo is a good way to forecast what changes will be in the final product, and we might as well keep track of them here since this is a good place to store data for competitive players. If any changes are made to the demo, we can just update them, and if someone puts in misinformation then others can correct it. Fitzpeter (talk) 23:01, 28 June 2018 (EDT)
Oppose, it seems like by that logic we shouldn't have included any technical changes in SSB4 pages until the game was done being patched. If there are accurately measurable changes present in the E3 game, then why not list them, and amend anything that was changed when the game comes out. Alex the Jigglypuff trainer 03:54, 29 June 2018 (EDT)
Part of the problem is that we have a lot of people adding changes and notes based on counting frames seen in the demo videos. Which is fair enough, those videos are in 60fps, and it's how we obtain frame data for a lot of things. But, Sakurai himself said that there will likely be some major changes, and even now, we're having a few people add a lot of things based on circumstantial evidence rather than scientific methods. Remember, there are added variables with 1v1 games due to the damage being amped up - we just simply don't have enough evidence to justify adding everything we can.
Furthermore, there is no implication that we shouldn't have waited until SSB4 stopped getting patches. If we did wait for that, we'd be waiting a long time due to the fact that nobody ever said that SSB4 would no longer be patched. We thought the game was done with getting patched before they updated to include the Corrin, Bayonetta and Cloud amiibo. We should indeed stay up to date on the game as patches get released, but before the GAME is released, we're having notes added based on circumstantial evidence that is highly likely to change - and there will be a lot of change. Black Vulpine of the Furry Nation. Furries make the internets go! :3 04:31, 29 June 2018 (EDT)
@Fitzpeter: As seen by the Mega Man down smash example or people who played Smash 4's E3 2014 demo claiming aerials there had a lot more landing lag, it's really not, and a lot of these values being put in have questionable authenticity to them (in the frame data counting, how do the people know there weren't any frame skips in the video or that the player acted as soon as they could, and how would one deduce a hitbox's size or actual knockback changes without being able to actually test the game?). Plus the game isn't even released yet, so there should be no rush to try getting specific frame data and the like down, no one is actually going to be able to utilize it.
@Alex: By that point the game is actually released, we were actually playing the game, actually able to datamine and thoroughly test stuff to determine accurate values, and there's quite a difference between playing a demo that's 6+ months out from release where so much is liable to change and is clearly not meant to be the final product, and a balance patch that adjusts some values to some characters and are never guaranteed to actually happen. Omega Tyrant TyranitarMS.png 07:00, 29 June 2018 (EDT)
I don't think this is a problem, though. Detailed data is just better data. Any data can be changed, and we'll have to document it when it changes, and there's no practical difference between data with real values and data with vague wording except that numbers are a lot more satisfying. With recordings we can know damage and frame data precisely, and there's no point in not including it deliberately, and it would be silly to take it out. Fitzpeter (talk) 12:33, 30 June 2018 (EDT)
"Detailed data is just better data."
Except this isn't "detailed data", it's flawed data, as not only is a lot of it unprovable or from faulty sources, it's from a 6+ months old beta version of the game that will be adjusted farther before release. Not only are a ton of more minor adjustments going to happen, significant functional changes can occur (like what happened with Mega Man's down smash in Smash 4).
"With recordings we can know damage and frame data precisely"
Except a lot of the damages being put down aren't accounting for the 1v1 no items damage boost/freshness bonus/staleness, and with frame data, how do we know people are acting on the immediate first frame they can, as well as if the video recordings haven't had any frame skips occur? Camcorder recordings are especially dodgy.
"there's no point in not including it deliberately, and it would be silly to take it out."
There is a point when the game isn't released yet and it been made clear farther balance adjustments will happen. The information has no use to begin with, when no one is able to play the game yet outside of a few minutes at the occasional demo, and such information is misleading to readers, when a lot of the "information" may not be reflected in the final game. There is no rush, just put down information about the core mechanics and wait until the game actually releases before trying to get all the frame data and such down. Omega Tyrant TyranitarMS.png 11:30, 1 July 2018 (EDT)
You keep saying the game isn't out yet, but why does that disqualify this data? It's still solid data if it's measured right. This data isn't going to mislead readers. They know this is speculation, but it's speculation by the developers, which definitely makes it worth noting on this wiki. In addition, I think you're overestimating how much of this data will be changed and how much of a problem that is.
Also, you can't assume that much of the data people enter is going to be false. Camcorders are faulty, but the solution is to look at multiple uses of the move to verify your data, or to use flawless vods downloaded from Twitch or other streaming services, like from the tournament at RAGE. Editors sometimes put in faulty data from bad or careless measurements, so some data entered is bad, but isn't that true of wikis in general? Other people that care can come in and fix it, or if no one cares then it'll stay bad forever, but since a lot of people care about Ultimate that probably won't happen in this case.
In addition, it's nice to know exactly how something has been changed. You can say Ivy's standing grab has less ending lag, but number will make that better. It went from a FAF of 50 to 43, so now it's less laggy than Lucas's annoying grab and it's not much worse than a normal grab. If you don't know those numbers, you don't really know much and it kind of sucks in comparison. I also want to tell people exactly how things have been changed, like how else will people know these things? It's lame to not tell people cool details.
Basically, I think it's not harmful to leave this data in, it's pointless to take it out, and a lot of people enjoy having it here. Fitzpeter (talk) 15:54, 1 July 2018 (EDT)
"It's still solid data if it's measured right."
If it's measured right. Solid data measuring isn't watching pre release demo clips that are subject to change, and hoping the video you're watching doesn't skip frames. I would argue that the one and only way data like dmg percent can be measured right is by datamining directly from the fished product. Also, damage in 1v1 matches is higher.
"This data isn't going to mislead readers. They know this is speculation, but it's speculation by the developers, which definitely makes it worth noting on this wiki."
Firstly, SmashWiki is not speculative, and as such it is not worth noting on the Wiki; If you do not have the raw data, you are speculating. Secondly, you don't know if readers will be mislead. It's not just a case of a simple update when a new patch comes out. It's adding information that is: 1) Highly subject to change and you only need to refer to past examples by Omega Tyrant to see that; 2) Pre-release "data" that could just as well be place holders until more fine tuning to balancing the game is made later (and was even confirmed by Sakurai that the data could change); and 3) Speculative at its core and nothing more. And with these three things, it only makes us look bad when that information is different after release. VoqéoT 02:46, 3 July 2018 (EDT)
Support I don't even see how this is debatable: the game is not out yet. We report on the technical stuff when the game comes out. That is how it has been, and how it needs to be. An unreleased game is an unfinished game. (Even though a released game can sometimes be unfinished too...) Aidan, the College-Bound Rurouni 15:48, 29 June 2018 (EDT)
Support. I agree 100%. I thought it was very odd to see such technical details on an unreleased game for which most of the video we have are off-screen phone recordings. Anthony1996 (talk) 02:02, 30 June 2018 (EDT)
Has consensus been reached? Seems like more supports than opposes, and, imo, the supports have a more compelling case. VoqéoT 09:43, 1 July 2018 (EDT)
I agree with Voqeo, and I motion to declare this proposal 'passed'. Black Vulpine of the Furry Nation. Furries make the internets go! :3 04:10, 3 July 2018 (EDT)
I don't think that's a good idea, as the consensus is rather weak as it stands. Alex the Jigglypuff trainer 04:16, 3 July 2018 (EDT)
I fail to see how this proposal hasn't passed on consensus. As of this writing, it is 6-2 in favor of support for waiting until the game releases. And I will reiterate:
  1. Technical data overrides fans slowing down videos.
  2. The game is unfinished, so we don't know what could change.
  3. The 1v1 damage increase could affect the data in any number of ways (this more so applies to damage percentage changes than frame data).
I too motion to declare this proposal as "passed". Aidan, the College-Bound Rurouni 20:11, 4 July 2018 (EDT)

Replace artwork from Mario Party 10 with artwork from Mario Party: The Top 100 where appropriate.

Mario Party 10 has been out for 3 years; Mario Party: The Top 100 is newer. In addition, it has just about the same quality images. Awesomelink234, the Super Cool Sonic Fan Leave a message if needed 01:03, 30 June 2018 (EDT)

This shouldn't need to be a proposal: if artwork is outdated, then update it. Aidan, the College-Bound Rurouni 02:05, 30 June 2018 (EDT)
I was just making sure it was okay with everyone, especially the admins. Awesomelink234, the Super Cool Sonic Fan Leave a message if needed 12:34, 30 June 2018 (EDT)
Again, this isn't something you need approval for; it's how the wiki operates. We update the images based on the most recent artwork of a character (should it line up with their appearance in Smash); there's no one you need to ask or check with to go through with this. Aidan, the College-Bound Rurouni 13:28, 30 June 2018 (EDT)
Done. The MP100 renders were uploaded now. For use as my signature icon. Nokii ε (T · C · L) 13:13, 30 June 2018 (EDT)

The revival of galleries on tournament pages

For those unaware, in the past, at least for some tournaments, we've had gallery sections showcasing various photos relevant to the tournament. There was never really any talk about keeping or banning it, but it just faded away anyways. I'd really like to see this become a feature on notable major tournaments. My reason for coming here instead of just doing it anyways was so that we can come to a consensus on whether to allow this or not. I personally think it looks really nice and allows for people to see what the tournament looked like. A good example of a nice-looking gallery section would be Apex 2012. Should this become accepted, we should try to come up with a minimum amount of attendance before a tournament qualifies for a gallery section. Pokebub (talk) 02:25, 5 July 2018 (EDT)

Semi-protect all SSBU character articles

As per SmashWiki is not speculative: "Major articles about unreleased content (such as character articles) will be immediately semi-protected until release to prevent speculation." VoqéoT 03:09, 6 July 2018 (EDT)

And I would also like to add that this will help against random ips adding in their own "findings" on things like dmg percent based on pre release footage. VoqéoT 16:22, 7 July 2018 (EDT)

Support I think that the leaks of movesets aren't official until Nintendo announces them. For personal use. George Jones Walls Can Fall.jpg 11:34, 17 July 2018 (EDT)
Support This also goes for if the starting roster will either be the Original 8 or 12, plus it’s tiring to revert the edits for the Original 64 unlockables' availability constantly. Like the previous comment, it's not official until Nintendo announces them to be. SSB4DarkSonicHead.pngSpeed48 11:41, 17 July 2018 (EDT)

Semi-protect Alternate costume (SSBU)

Alright, I've had enough. Let me be clear that I am sick of all the nonsensical edits made to this page, mostly claiming false resemblances, among other things. Also, all other alternate costume pages are protected, so why not this one? Plus, with Ultimate's sheer number of characters, it would be only harder to control when the game releases. Awesomelink234, the Super Cool Sonic Fan Leave a message if needed 03:03, 7 July 2018 (EDT)

Support Agreed! This'll only get worse if something doesn't happen soon! SSB4DarkSonicHead.pngSpeed48 03:15, 7 July 2018 (EDT)
Support: As per what has also been said here. VoqéoT 08:04, 7 July 2018 (EDT)

Using item / Pokémon / Assist Trophy artwork from the official SSBU website

Would this be alright to do? The official item artwork on the website is a bit small (240x240 for most), but I feel like it works for the thumbnail size. Bomberman already does this (but with slightly higher resolution artwork), and I've provided another example on Chef Kawasaki's page. I know it's probably a silly question, but I want to confirm if it's alright before I go through with it. DryKirby64 (talk) 18:42, 8 August 2018 (EDT)

Uploading Higher Rez Renders and Images

I happen to possess 4K renders of all the fighters, excluding shulk, falco, and palutena, as well as higher rez versions of all the key visual artwork. I did not resize the images or upscale them in anyway. I was wondering if the wiki would like these assets.--Leafpenguin (talk) 03:30, 20 August 2018 (EDT)

Don't take my answer as final, but we have no real need or use for 4K renders. These are not going to be displayed any larger than 1080p (if that), making the extra pixels a waste of space. Black Vulpine of the Furry Nation. Furries make the internets go! :3 05:52, 20 August 2018 (EDT)

Making a Shield Breaking Page

I've been on the the wiki for a while now, and can't seem to find a page that collectively shows all the moves that breaks shield. So I was wondering, why not make one. MantiCorgi (talk) 14:31, 4 October 2018 (MT)

Any attack can break a shield when it does enough damage. If you’re referring to attacks that do bonus shield damage, we already have an article for that. Black Vulpine of the Furry Nation. Furries make the internets go! :3 17:53, 4 October 2018 (EDT)

Remove Smash Blog quotes

I would like to propose that we remove the Smash Blog quotes from the top of Ultimate pages as I believe they create unnecessary clutter (especially on pages like Saffron City that have 2 quotes on top now), and they have a somewhat notorious history with typos (more infamously, Sheik's gender). VoqéoT 14:47, 10 October 2018 (EDT)

Oppose. It’s not really cluttered, that space is blank/filled with an ad when the quote isn’t there. Additionally, where else would we put it? We’re a Smash encyclopedia, and that is Smash information. Without it, we wouldn’t know the names of King K. Rool’s specials or any of that jazz. I don’t think some typos and onestupid Birdo type controversy should stop them from being there. Also ala Birdo, just because the controversy exists does not mean information shouldn’t be there. For instance, in Super Mario Party’s Manual (in the UK) Birdo is refereed to as male. Does that stop MarioWiki from including anything from SMP’s manual? Two letters for you: N O. 72.133.91.93 15:11, 10 October 2018 (EDT)Blueflame105
You must bold your vote. Also, it must be either Support or Oppose, exactly. I've done it for you, but remember to do it next time with three apostrophes around it like '''this'''. Awesomelink234, the Super Spooky Sonic Fan Leave a message if needed 15:15, 10 October 2018 (EDT)
This is, to my knowledge, just a user-defined convention and not a strict or enforceable rule. Users should feel free to make whatever comments and/or votes as they like. – Emmett 15:57, 10 October 2018 (EDT)
Votes should be bolded, but they can say whatever the user wants, as long as it is clear which side of the argument they are on. Black Vulpine of the Furry Nation. Furries make the internets go! :3 20:32, 10 October 2018 (EDT)
Oppose They're as important as any other quote. Awesomelink234, the Super Spooky Sonic Fan Leave a message if needed 15:15, 10 October 2018 (EDT)
Oppose Exactly what is so cluttered about them? Aidan, the Spooky Rurouni 15:19, 10 October 2018 (EDT)
Oppose As per the above statements, plus we wouldn't have known the name of Chrom's Final Smash if we removed the quotes. File:SonicSpeed48HalloweenSig.pngSonic, the Speedy SpookableSpookableScarerTigger.png 15:20, 10 October 2018 (EDT)
I support in the case of more than one quote, which to me looks absolutely dreadful, but am fairly neutral about them in principle. They're no more "unnecessary clutter" than trivia sections, for example, but we keep those. – Emmett 15:57, 10 October 2018 (EDT)
Support. The typos and inaccuracies are really unsightly. And for people opposing, wouldn't you be okay with replacing them with relevant descriptions from official sources (such as the game itself) after release that aren't riddled with errors? SuperFalconBros (talk) 16:27, 10 October 2018 (EDT)
Oppose: They are needed and it's part of the game! Dragonfirebreath25 (talk) 17:05, 10 October 2018 (EDT)

Oppose In the case of there being only one quote at the top of the article, I personally think that's fine. The only articles that have more than one are the ones that quote multiple instruction books right? So what if instead of outright removing them, we actually make a section (and maybe a fancy table) for them towards the bottom of the article, like maybe after the trophy description in items' case, or before the origin section. Serpent SKSig.png King 17:07, 10 October 2018 (EDT)

Most of the opposition responses here don't address issue of typos and inaccuracies. Whether it's at the top or bottom of the article, why should we include quotes that are riddled with errors? Where do we draw the line? If the blog post tomorrow says "Roy's sword is strongest at it's tip" or "Captain Falcon's Final Smash unleashes the devastating Warlock Punch on all opponent," are those essential official quotes we have to include? SuperFalconBros (talk) 17:15, 10 October 2018 (EDT)

While there may be some with errors, how prevalent are these mistakes really? Sheik (SSBU) is easily resolvable with a [sic] tag; how many are there that are so inaccurate that they'd be worth disqualifying? – Emmett 17:37, 10 October 2018 (EDT)
It's my opinion that official quotes are nice to have but not necessary to begin with, so any non-trivial percentage of errors ought to be enough to reconsider the source. There are numerous blog posts with typos (including the most recent one for a fighter, Dr. Mario) as well as mistakes like in Sheik's. Even in the absence of errors, you have blurbs like the most recent for Boxing Ring, which unhelpfully says "you'll have to wait and see" what happens if you attack the light fixture... There are even alternative, much cleaner sources with the same gist as the blurbs, such as the NintendoVS Twitter account. SuperFalconBros (talk) 18:08, 10 October 2018 (EDT)

Vehement support. These page-top quotes from manuals and the official site are the laziest kind of cruft and bloat, and do little but push down the actual article - especially on pages like Home-Run Bat which have several. I think we'd have a much cleaner, more legible set of page intros without these cluttering things up. Miles (talk) 18:03, 10 October 2018 (EDT)

For all those supporting for errors, you do know you can just slap on the [sic] tag, right? Sheik and Ganondorf's SSBU pages have it. Awesomelink234, the Super Spooky Sonic Fan Leave a message if needed 18:11, 10 October 2018 (EDT)

What is the value added by including error-ridden quotes with minimal content? Why are we degrading the quality of our own articles with typos and inaccuracies, just because "hey, they exist and they're official so why not?" It should be a red flag if we have to add [sic] all over the place. If we really absolutely need some filler text, there are better quality versions of the same blurbs available on the NintendoVS Twitter. SuperFalconBros (talk) 20:17, 10 October 2018 (EDT)

Absolutely not. First off, there's no clutter about a properly-inserted quotebox, and second, a typo can be highlighted with a [sic] tag. Black Vulpine of the Furry Nation. Furries make the internets go! :3 18:35, 10 October 2018 (EDT)

Get pagetop quotes the hell off this wiki. They might deserve to be on the page, but nothing but maintenance templates should be above an article's introductory sentence. Toomai Glittershine ??? The Cloronic 18:58, 10 October 2018 (EDT)

Move them to another part of the page like in a section of their own or something like that. Official quotes are interesting enough to be put in an article but should probably not be the first sentences you read in an article, especially if they're inaccurate. Ponyshment PonyshmentSignature.png 19:07, 10 October 2018 (EDT)

Oppose, for the reasons stated above (I'll also be partially biased since I started this to begin with :P). I do support moving it, maybe on its own section along other quotes, since I'm having trouble figuring out where they otherwise fit in as the pages are currently. — For use as my signature icon during Halloween. Nokii (T·C·L) 19:58, 10 October 2018 (EDT)

Oppose, for the reasons stated above. I don't find it too cluttered if there's more than one quote, and if others believe so, there can always be a quote section. SugarCookie420 (talk) 22:03, 10 October 2018 (EDT)

Another blog post, another worthless and vague at best, simply incorrect at worst statement that we're enshrining in the wiki: "[Shulk] is the only fighter that can change his status during battle." Now what does that even mean? Well, by almost any definition, except "the only fighter that can use Monado arts," this is untrue. Wii Fit Trainer and Cloud can both change their character attributes. Can anyone opposing this proposal make an argument why this kind of nonsensical bloat deserves to be in the fighter articles? SuperFalconBros (talk) 22:47, 14 October 2018 (EDT)

If you were to make a more thorough read of the above to find what the arguments are:
  • They offer a handful of info that wasn't covered before, including the name for some fighters' Final Smashes.
  • A few typos or errors don't justify their removal. We cover stuff like site, manual and trophy descriptions, which are always prone to (and do) have errors. If you want the removal of one, you're also accepting the deletion of the rest, simply because they contain, in one way or another, some sort of error.
    • By extension, the Super Smash Blog quotes are no more "clogged" than any other descriptive text in terms of space. Thus, removing them on this bias is questionable.
We are a Smash wiki, and thus we cover any information provided by the adequate sources. Their coverage does not hurt our reputation as a wiki, neither has anyone claimed that the wiki holds any sources, primary or otherwise, as truthful or factual. It's their responsibility to provide information, and ours to preserve them.
Hopefully that sums it up. — For use as my signature icon during Halloween. Nokii (T·C·L) 23:39, 14 October 2018 (EDT)

Support per Miles and Toomai. I would suggest however, that we move all the Smash blog quotes and manual quotes onto their own pages. Something like "List of Super Smash Bros. Ultimate character quotes" and "List of Super Smash Bros. manual quotes". Even then, I still think that'd be a bit excessive, but a good midpoint for supports and opposers. Pokebub (talk) 00:45, 15 October 2018 (EDT)

Creating a page for Vergeben's Rumors

I kinda talked about it here, but I want some actual input. Vergeben's rumors is by far the most popular leak currently out there, since it is currently mostly accurate. Since Gematsu leaks and the ESRB leaks have their own page, why not Vergeben's? I honestly think we should wait, however, at the same time there is a lot of news in that section that could be placed in their own page. SugarCookie420 (talk) 22:10, 10 October 2018 (EDT)

Support - Vergeben's rumors have definitely reached the Gematsu and ESRB leaks' levels of discussion. I was going to suggest we wait, but I realized that it'd be kind of counter-intuitive considering the Gematsu leak page was created during it's period of relevancy. Pokebub (talk) 00:56, 15 October 2018 (EDT)

Support - As Pokebub said, the rumors are pretty huge and start to look like a real leak. -81.218.171.51 07:47, 15 October 2018 (EDT)