SmashWiki:Smasher article guidelines

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SW:SMASHER

Smasher articles are a valued part of the wiki, providing "Smash biographies" of the players, tournament organizers, and contributors, that make the competitive scene and greater Smash community possible. These articles are meant to chronicle the contributions and endeavors in Smash of notable smashers, and provide a source for other smash-relevant information on these individuals that is of interest to readers. This page will guideline what is expected and accepted in Smasher articles, and how Smasher articles should be constructed, when creating and modifying existing smasher articles.

SmashWiki: Notability

The very first, and most important thing, to keep in mind when it comes to creating smasher articles is if the article's subject merits an article to begin with. Articles about smashers with dubious notability, and articles that contain next-to-no relevant information, are liable to be tagged for notability-based deletion, where then if information isn't presented proving notability and/or an admin handling the notability check doesn't find enough evidence of notability, the article will be deleted.

Keep in mind however, that the wiki documents smasher articles on a historical basis. So if a smasher was found to have satisfied our notability guidelines at some point-in-time, they will be considered notable enough to have a smasher article here regardless of how irrelevant they end up becoming in the future, barring an update to the notability guidelines or new information/arguments being brought up that finds the original notability-approval dubious.

Smasher article essentials

The following guideline what every Smasher article must contain, and will be expected to have at their creation.

Template:Infobox Smasher

This is an infobox designed specifically for smasher articles, to organise basic-yet-necessary information, such as the characters the article's subject uses in tournaments for each game and their location. Every relevant field should be filled out with the appropriate information. Specifics on what should go into each field is covered on the template's documentation page. Certain things are allowed to be omitted by the request of the smasher in question, for security reasons. They include real names, birth dates, and locations (although instead of completely omitting the location, it's probably better to be less specific, countries/states/provinces are usually enough). Things that are not allowed to be taken away include screen name/tag, image, mains, rankings, skills, winnings, crews, etc.

Intro

Each Smasher article needs an intro describing who the article subject is, what they do in Smash that makes them notable, and a concise explanation of their accomplishments and endeavors that make them notable. Intros should additionally have information about the article subject's current status in the Smash community.

Tournament results

All smashers that achieved notability for their playing in the competitive scene require documentation of their tournament placings. Tournament results should be inserted into the article in table form, and separated into subsections based on game, such as the following:

Tournament Date 1v1 placement 2v2 placement Partner Earnings
CEO 2014 June 27th-29th, 2014 2nd $548
Kings of Cali 4 July 5th-6th, 2014 1st 3rd Scar $959.25
EVO 2014 July 11th-13th, 2014 1st 7th Lucky $5,820
Carroll Fest 5 August 16th, 2014 1st 1st Juggleguy $160
Smash the Record August 22nd-25th, 2014 3rd 2nd Colbol $0

All verifiable tournament results should be added, with the exception of smaller online tournaments. These should only be included in situations where there are relatively few results. However, exceptions can be made if the smasher wishes to have their online results listed. If the article's subject has competed in a very large amount of tournaments, only the smasher's results at the most notable tournaments they competed in should be listed, while the rest of the results should be listed in a linked subpage. Also keep in mind that the results must be sourced; tournament results that aren't linked to something proving its veracity, like a smash.gg page, will be removed. Additionally, if the tournament in question has a SmashWiki article, it is preferable to link to it over external sources.

If there are no tournament results listed on the page or a significant amount of notable results are missing, use {{Results}} to indicate that the article needs such. Additionally use the template if the article's results are missing relevant data such as tourney dates and earnings.

Tournaments directed

If the article subject has directed any Smash tournaments, they should be listed too, in table form like tournament results:

Tournament Date 1v1 attendance 1v1 prize pot 2v2 attendance 2v2 prize pot
The Big House October 22nd, 2011 115 $1,619 39 teams $780
The Big House 2 October 6-7th, 2012 128 $1,920 40 teams $800
The Big House 3 October 12th-13th, 2013 172 $2,400 48 teams $960
The Big House 4 October 4th-5th, 2014 574 $5,701 114 teams $2,280
The Big House 5 October 2nd-4th, 2015 1,317 $18,170 224 teams $6,480

And like with tournaments, links to a source proving the tournament's veracity is required, while SmashWiki links are preferred over external links.

Categories

On any Smasher article, every category the wiki has that the article's subject fits into should be added; such as if the player uses Mario competitively in Smash 4, the Mario professionals (SSB4) category should be added. For a comprehensive catalog on the categories that may be applicable to a smasher page, go here.

Other information of interest

The following is additional information Smasher articles should contain.

History

A detailed synopsis of the subject's history with Smash, starting from when and how they got into Smash and its competitive scene.

Play style

A detailed synopsis of the subject's playstyle, and why they play the characters they main. If the subject additionally has known particular views about Smash, they can be elaborated on in these sections.

Controversies

If the subject has been involved with any noteworthy controversies within the Smash community, they should be covered in a dedicated section. However, these sections must be thoroughly sourced with links verifying said controversy, the injection of rumors will not be tolerated. Additionally, while the common reactions from the Smash community and involved parties should be covered, editors must avoid injecting their own opinions into these sections. Furthermore, only controversies that directly impact a smasher's playing career or their involvement in the Smash scene should be noted.

Trivia

Is the subject noteworthy for competing in other games? Is there a well-known joke/meme about the subject within their region or the greater Smash community? Any other Smash-related facts about the subject not covered elsewhere in the article that would be of interest to readers? Write about any interesting trivial facts in a trivia section. Keep in mind that SmashWiki's trivia guidelines still apply.

External links and videos

Any noteworthy videos of the subject, such as a popular combo video or highly notable match, should be linked or embedded in the article in a dedicated section. Additionally, an external links section should be made, where any smash-related accounts on external sites run by the subject should be linked to.

Self-creating/self-editing

While it may be seen as unsavory for one to create and edit Smasher articles about themself and their friends, it is allowed on SmashWiki; we recognize that the best source for information about a smasher can be directly from the smasher themself, and that facts are objective regardless of who writes them into an article. However, smasher articles created/edited by the subject and/or their friends will be more heavily scrutinized, and any misrepresentations of the facts and overindulgence will not be tolerated; do not abuse our Smasher articles to get an ego boost. Additionally, smashers do not own the articles about themselves, and will not be allowed to exert more control over their content than any other user; see SmashWiki: Ownership for our full policy on page ownership.

Other guidelines to remember

These are additional guidelines not covered in the prior sections that should be heeded when editing Smasher articles.

  • In cases where a smasher goes by multiple names, their article's title should be the tag the smasher is most commonly referred to by.
  • When creating a Smasher article, do not create an article that just has a smasher infobox and a single sentence or two saying who they play. Besides making notability checking the subject more difficult, it leaves us with an article that has no real information and serves interest to no one, being hardly any better than if the article wasn't there to begin with. Even if the smasher is very well-known, don't create the article just for the sake of removing a red link if you're not knowledgeable enough about the subject or not willing enough to write down more than a couple of sentences. Users who do this will be reprimanded.
  • The picture used in a smasher infobox should be a recent picture of professional quality, preferably of the subject alone in a tournament setting. Selfies or any other such low-quality pictures of the subject should not be used. The picture additionally must be of the subject, no other sort of image will be acceptable in the infobox.
  • If you think an article's subject is not notable enough for a Smasher article, be sure to check the talkpage and page history to see if the subject already had a notability check. If they did and you still think they shouldn't have an article, bring it up on the talkpage to discuss it; if you put a notability tag back on without doing so, it'll be taken back down and you will risk being reprimanded.
  • If an article's subject desires, personal information such as their name and birthdate must be removed from their article. Beyond that, no information should be removed nor modified based on the subject objecting, and a smasher article should never be deleted just because its subject does not want an article of themself up, barring extenuating circumstances.