MarioWiki:Proposals/Archive/62: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 623: | Line 623: | ||
====Comments==== | ====Comments==== | ||
===Clarify how to italicize merchandise titles in articles=== | |||
{{ProposalOutcome|passed|0-4-1-1-0-0|Fully italicize tabletop games, and otherwise only unique brands and Super Mario games/series}} | |||
This is what [[MarioWiki:Manual of Style]] currently states regarding [[MarioWiki:Manual of Style#Italicizing titles|italicization of media titles]] in articles: | |||
<blockquote> | |||
The wiki has decided it proper to respect ''all'' games, series, movies, television programs, albums (music) and publications (print: comics, books and magazines) by italicizing ''all'' of their titles... | |||
</blockquote> | |||
This policy does a good job covering the vast majority of media (i.e. all digital games, audiovisual media, and print media), with the only type of media not covered being [[:Category:Merchandise|physical merchandise]]. All of this media is listed in [[Template:Merchandise]], which has led me to notice inconsistencies in how the titles of merchandise are italicized. For example: | |||
*Despite both being board games, ''[[Mario Kart Wii Grand Prix]]'' is italicized, while [[Monopoly Gamer]] is not. | |||
*[[LEGO Super Mario|LEGO ''Super Mario'']] only italicizes the name of the [[Super Mario (franchise)|''Super Mario'' franchise]] and not the name of the LEGO brand, but [[Super Mario Backpack Buddies]] leaves the entire title unitalicized, including the ''Super Mario'' franchise name. | |||
*None of the food media have italicized titles (i.e. breakfast cereals such as [[Nintendo Cereal System]] and [[Super Mario Cereal]], and other packaged food such as [[Sunshine Biscuits]] [[:File:Sunshine Biscuits box 01.jpg|Super Mario Bros. Chocolate Cookies]] and [[Keebler]] [[:File:Keebler Mario Kart Fudge Stripes.jpg|Mario Kart Fudge Stripes]]. | |||
*The ''[[Video Game Super Stars]]'' action figure brand is italicized, but other unique brand names, such as [[Trading Card Treats]], are not. | |||
This proposal aims to fix these problems by standardizing how merchandise is italicized. I've tried to keep the proposal as simple as possible; my apologies if this is unnecessarily complicated. | |||
I want to limit unnecessary voting options, so if one thing comes out of this, it's clear that the titles of physical tabletop games (board games, card games, and others such as [[Donkey Kong Jenga|''Donkey Kong'' Jenga]]) should be completely italicized, because they are objectively games just like any digital game, and they should thus fall under existing italicization policy. What's left is to decide how the titles of other merchandise types should be italicized, if at all. | |||
As a clarification, only ''official'' merchandise titles should be considered for italicization, i.e. titles that are clearly displayed on the merchandise's packaging, on the item itself, or otherwise from a reliable source, such as the manufacturer's website; a title from a source such as an Amazon or eBay listing is too unreliable, and a unitalicized, general description of the item can be used instead in those cases. | |||
There are three notable features of many ''Super Mario'' franchise merchandise: | |||
*Unique brand names used to distinguish a series of merchandise, most commonly with collectibles such as the [[Super Mario Trading Card Collection|''Super Mario'' Trading Card Collection]], [[Nintendo Super Secrets cards|Nintendo Super Secrets]], and the aforementioned Trading Card Treats. | |||
*Names of games and series in the ''Super Mario'' franchise, as well as the franchise itself. These should already be italicized per existing policy. | |||
*Product names used to title each item in a series, such as the [[Burger King]] "Donkey Kong Time Racer" toy. A product name can also be given to standalone items, such as the [[Mushroom Bank (merchandise)|Mushroom Bank]]. Because these are almost used simply to describe a product in the same way as an unofficial brief description, I believe these can safely be left unitalicized. I haven't included many options regarding these to keep voting options to a minimum, though please let me know if there is a valid argument against this. | |||
Note that in this context, brand names should not be confused with the names of the companies that manufacture and/or sell the brands, such as [[First4Figures]], [[Mattel]], or [[Taco Bell]]; these should be left unitalicized. As an example, [[Freiberger]] is a company, Pizzatainment is one of their brands, and Triple Salami Explosion is one of the products sold under that brand. | |||
Because of these features, I see four possible choices for italicization of the titles of non-tabletop-game merchandise: | |||
*'''Completely italicize the entire title''', just like the other media already described in MarioWiki:Manual of Style. | |||
*'''Italicize any unique brand names and ''Super Mario'' games or series''', but do ''not'' italicize any other words. | |||
*'''Only italicize the name of a ''Super Mario'' game, series, or the franchise''' if it appears in the title, but do ''not'' italicize any brand names or other words. | |||
*'''Do not italicize the title at all.''' | |||
My personal choice from these options would be to italicize the names of any unique brand names and ''Super Mario'' games or series, but leave any other words unitalicized. I believe this would be the best balance between leaving all merchandise titles subject to a lack of standardization and brazenly italicizing merchandise titles where it may be unwarranted, though I can see a valid argument being made for most of the other options. | |||
The option that receives the most votes should be explicitly listed as a guideline on MarioWiki:Manual of Style, under the "Italicizing titles" header. Please bring up any points of confusion or contention in the comments. | |||
'''Proposer''': {{User|ThePowerPlayer}}<br> | |||
'''Deadline''': June 16, 2023, 23:59 GMT | |||
====Fully italicize the entire titles of all merchandise==== | |||
====Fully italicize titles of tabletop games, and italicize only the names of unique brands and ''Super Mario'' games or series otherwise==== | |||
#{{User|ThePowerPlayer}} Per proposal. | |||
#{{User|SolemnStormcloud}} This makes the most sense. | |||
#{{User|Camwoodstock}} Works for us, since this definitely is most in line with how we usually format things as-is, and the tabletop games should've been fully italicized from the start. | |||
#{{User|Waluigi Time}} Per all. | |||
====Fully italicize titles of tabletop games, and italicize only the names of ''Super Mario'' games or series otherwise==== | |||
#{{User|Koopa con Carne}} MLA makes a point to [https://hcc-commnet.libguides.com/mla/games italicise board game titles] in as recently as their 9th edition book. The wiki already adopts MLA's style guide for video game titles, so doing the same thing with board games (as well as other types of tabletop games for that matter) seems pretty consistent to me. As for brand names, MLA states they [https://style.mla.org/styling-brand-names/ should be formatted without italics], so you'd have ''Super Mario'' Trading Card Collection written as such, with "''Super Mario''" written in italics since the wiki currently does this for media franchise names. Though, there should be another discussion on whether media franchises should be considered works (and thus warranting italicisation) or brands; MLA isn't clear on that distinction, and the most relevant article of theirs I could find [https://style.mla.org/trilogy-titles/ only regards book/movie series and trilogies]. | |||
====Fully italicize titles of only tabletop games, and do not italicize titles of other merchandise==== | |||
#{{User|MegaBowser64}} Wikipedia italicizes board and card games and doesn't capitalize other merch. I don't really see the point in italicizing franchise names within the name of another product which could possibly already have some italicization going on. | |||
====Do not italicize titles of any merchandise whatsoever==== | |||
====Do not establish any guidelines regarding merchandise titles==== | |||
====Comments==== | |||
According to Grammarly, titles of board games and card games shouldn't be italicized, but Wikipedia italicizes board game titles. Shouldn't only the name of a franchise or video game in the title of a board game or card game be italicized to be grammatically correct? [[User:Dwhitney|Dwhitney]] ([[User talk:Dwhitney|talk]]) 12:30, June 10, 2023 (EDT) | |||
:Although you have a fair point, after reading the [https://www.grammarly.com/blog/italics/ Grammarly article] about italics, I have some contention regarding point 6, which discusses italicizing game titles. First of all, to follow Grammarly's guidelines not to italicize board game titles would go against {{wp|Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Titles of works|Wikipedia's Manual of Style}}, which says that video games, board games, and trading card games should be italicized. From my understanding, this is because these games are fully self-contained pieces of media, rather than a smaller work which would appear in a larger piece of media (such as a ''[[Mario Party]]'' [[minigame]], an episode of a TV show, a song in an album, or an article in a magazine). The Grammarly article also claims that apps also qualify as long, published works that should be italicized, despite the fact that I have never seen a single written source — whether it be a casual conversation, a Super Mario Wiki article, a Wikipedia article, or an academic research paper — italicize the names of apps. Finally, although this point isn't as objective, including all tabletop games as media that should be italicized simply helps avoid confusion, making the process of italicizing titles as easy to follow as possible without being clearly incorrect. {{User:ThePowerPlayer/sig}} 20:03, June 11, 2023 (EDT) |
Revision as of 12:08, June 17, 2023
Turn the Stafy article into a disambiguationWe apologize in advance for how long this proposal is, but we wanted to make sure we covered all our bases here... Y'know, for a disambiguation article. You'll see what we mean. Stafy, probably, does not need a full article as a character. He does not directly appear in any Mario games as himself. But like, the current state of his "article" is not much better. It currently directly redirects to his given section of the Assist Trophy section, which would be fine enough if that was all there was, right? Stafy has only made a physical appearance in Smash Bros., it's another Smash Bros. thing, pack it in, chumps, we're done! Crisis averted, and we can all go home. ...But then, Starfish exists. Yeahhh, this guy is weird. Starfish is implied in all but direct statements to be Stafy himself in sunglasses, prancing about in Super Princess Peach in multiple distinct levels, which is, indeed, a Mario game; or at least a game with Mario in it that we give sufficient coverage for. And he's not just some background cameo, either; he makes physical appearances, he's acknowledged by the in-game Bestiary, he's even mentioned in in-game hints telling the player about his secret presence! In fact, there's been a proposal in the past to just outright merge him with a formerly-extant Stafy page. Now, while resurrecting the old page just to merge this article into it feels like a bit too much (especially since that's really just a more roundabout rename at that point), it bugs us quite a bit that this article for a character we know is heavily based on Stafy, and is implied to even be Stafy, is just... an article you wouldn't come across if you had the gull to search "Stafy" directly, and you'd get shoved right to his Assist Trophy section instead. And then there's Densetsu no Stafy 3. Yes, that's a blue link, and for good cause; one of the levels in that game is a crossover with Wario Land 4. Wario even physically appears in it, complete with his transformation gimmicks, which Stafy must readily exploit to solve puzzles and progress through the level! This is something we cover readily, since we've determined this is a substantial appearance of Wario. It's even got a Staff page. And besides, it's not like we haven't set the precedent before that crossovers like this that are for a full level are fine before this; just look at Rhythm Heaven Megamix or Sonic Lost World. And, again... You wouldn't find this if you just typed "Stafy" and had the gull to hit "search" or press your enter key, without hearing the advice of autocomplete first. It's only marginally less hard to find with autocomplete, to be fair, but it wouldn't shock us if people are flat-out unaware this exists because they did just type "Stafy" and not think twice. That's two entire articles we have about Stafy, both of which are, indeed, worthy of coverage on our wiki (an entire enemy in a video game for the former, and a substantially important crossover in the latter), that you'd never even know were there if you simply wrote "Stafy". This isn't even getting in to the less substantial stuff, like, say, the Yoshi Theater cameo in Superstar Saga, or the List of references in Nintendo games article's subsection, or even that one SMM1 level, because frankly, 3 is already enough as-is to us. We re-iterate; we do not think Stafy needs a full article on his own, so please don't treat us like we're saying so, thanks to his lack of direct physical appearance in-game. Starfish comes close, but it's just a little too indirect and wishy-washy for us. However, we do think that making the Stafy article a redirect to Assist Trophy, blatantly ignoring the other two articles, is... a little too extreme, wouldn't you say? And it's not like we can't just append a "see also" to Stafy's section on the Assist Trophy article, or anything. So... What if we just didn't do either of those? That's right, you read the proposal name, we're finally about to say the line. We think Stafy should be a disambiguation article. What should it disambiguate between? Well, here's our idea:
If, for whatever reason, you disagree with the "just a disambiguation" and feel he needs his own full article after this, that's fine, and we did put that as an option just in case that begins to prevail for whatever reason. However, we'd personally advise against it, because we don't feel like he's gotten quite that appearance that's more involved than brief cameos lasting only a stage/a few stages/an Assist Trophy just yet. But as for us, we feel like we've made our stance fairly clear that we could definitely bear to at least let readers know that there's a little bit more to Stafy than just his assist trophy. Proposer: Camwoodstock (talk) Convert to a disambiguation page
Convert to a full article
Do nothing
Comments@Hewer: The reason the proposal is so long is, well, we effectively had to cover every apperance Stafy made in Mario-adjacent media, and then explain why we think it's fair enough that there's an article for that, but Stafy himself doesn't really warrant an article. As for the whole Starfy/Stafy thing, that's admittedly force of habit on our part; but now that you've brought it up, yes, we'd probably go with Starfy, as that's the most recent English name for him, with Stafy being a redirect. ~Camwoodstock (talk) 10:30, May 8, 2023 (EDT) Consider, if you will, how Mad Scienstein is handled. It seems relevant here. Doc von Schmeltwick (talk) 13:05, May 8, 2023 (EDT)
Template:ProposalOutcome (I made this proposal here and not on the talk page since this doesn't just affect the main Banzai Bill page but also the other species) You may have noticed Banzai Bills are occasionally getting called "Bomber Bills" on occasion. At first, it seemed like either a strange case of censorship (regarding the LEGO sets) or a translation error (such as the English Mario Portal website). However, with The Super Mario Bros. Movie using this term now, I am heavily convinced that Bomber Bill is the new name. To explain, let me detail the history of Banzai Bill's renames. LEGO Mario Sets English Mario Portal Now this website isn't perfect; there are some errors and kinks in terms of translations, and at that time, the term Bomber Bill had not appeared. But what was interesting was that it was somewhat a combination of the word "bomb" and "boomer", like the LEGO sets. That is particularly strange, but it wouldn't suggest a rename. Well, that is until now. The Super Mario Bros. Movie
In this movie, Bowser is about to launch a giant Banzai Bill onto Peach's Castle. But here's the riveting thing; Bowser says, "Launch the Bomber Bill and DESTROY THE MUSHROOM KINGDOM!!" Woah, what?! Bowser just used the term "Bomber"! What does that mean? Well, the implications seem to be clear now. What seemed like censorship on LEGO's part or an odd translation goof on the Mario website, we now have a significant, full-length movie telling us it's a Bomber Bill. I didn't know about it until I randomly stumbled upon it on its page. The goal of this proposal These articles will get these renames.:
These articles will keep their names currently.: The reasons are that they have yet to get an English translation. If they appear in future games and have the name Bomber Bills, we still call the cannons Banzai Bill Cannons if they aren't named in-game. If a new name for them comes out (like Bomber Bill Blasters), we call them that in their appearances with Bomber Bills as we did with Paragaloomba. Proposer: Wikiboy10 (talk) SupportOppose
Comments@Seanwheeler He definitely says "Bomber". Nightwicked Bowser 16:21, May 17, 2023 (EDT)
I've seen the movie in theaters, the English version with Dutch subtitles to be specific. I'm pretty sure Bowser said "Bomber Bill", and I theorize that they were called "Bomber Bill" on the Mario Portal because of the movie. Create articles for Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix songsTemplate:ProposalOutcome My reasoning for this is simple: Our coverage policy is that levels get their own article. As a rhythm game, Mario Mix's songs are its equivalent of levels. Therefore, they should have their own article. I think these articles would be substantial enough to justify their existence on their own, as well. Each one would have an infobox primarily made to contain information on each difficulty's note count, and the article would cover the song's origin, role in Story Mode, what occurs in the background during the song, and what elements show up in Mush Mode. The elements in question here are the names of these articles, and whether they should cover all of the original song's Mario-series appearances (similarly to how Mario is Missing! opens up articles for landmarks that then appear in minor roles in Mario Kart Tour). I see multiple philosophies here, each with potential upsides and downsides.
Oh, one more thing: yes, my argument for making Mario Mix song articles does also apply to the Donkey Konga series. I was originally planning on this proposal extending to those games as well, but I'm much less familiar and their situations are slightly different in many places, so I decided to just focus on Mario Mix for now. Proposer: Ahemtoday (talk) Option 1: Articles cover only Mario Mix, use Mario Mix names
Option 2: Articles cover all appearances, use original names
Option 3: Articles cover all appearances, use Mario Mix namesOption 4: Articles cover all appearances, named on case-by-case basis
Option 5: Do not create articlesCommentsPersonally, I think we should consider an attempt to list the original music for each arrangement more correctly; for instance, this table lists the original music for "Pirate Dance" being the Athletic theme of Super Mario World, yet the beginning is clearly based on the intro for Super Mario World's Ground theme; and with "Step by Step", the original music is listed as "Bonus game / Switch Palace" from Super Mario World: not only parsed with spaces as if they're two different tunes (even though they share the same music), but I believe it's also an arrangement of Vanilla Dome, also from Super Mario World, which the table fails to mention completely. "Step By Step" could also be a slower-paces arrangement of the Athletic theme instead of "Pirate Dance", the intro for "Step by Step" does sound like a mix between that and Vanilla Dome. I don't know if the current listings were originally from Nintendo themselves or not, but I think some more thorough research may be in order for a couple of tracks. rend (talk) (edits) 19:44, May 11, 2023 (EDT) For clarification, do options 2-4 create separate pages for the music like the recurring themes in Category:Musical themes or are they included in the Mario Mix level page itself like with Gusty Garden Galaxy § Music? If it's the former, the original proposal for covering recurring themes specifies that a theme needs to appear in at least 8 unique games. - RHG1951 (talk) 11:17, May 12, 2023 (EDT)
I'd personally prefer to see a draft of an article before I throw my hat in the ring. If I do support, I'm definitely picking option 1 - most of the tracks in Mario Mix are neither major recurring themes nor original songs ("songs" meaning they have lyrics, like Phantom of the Bwahpera), so we should be treating these like level articles, not song articles. Plus it's just awkward to be like "yeah here's an article on the music from Toy Dream even though none of the other Mario Party board themes have one; it appeared in some rhythm game so that makes it special". I am completely opposed to making song articles for the Donkey Konga games. There's no storyline or scenario behind the songs in that game, so articles on them would ultimately boil down to lyrics sheets for a bunch of random pop and rock songs. At best they warrant a list, like ones we have for the Mario cartoons. 09:24, May 13, 2023 (EDT)
Split major classic remakesTemplate:ProposalOutcome I was inspired by the Mario Bros. split proposal to make this proposal. Essentially, we have some remakes, like SM64/DS, the SMA series, & SMBDX split. With the Switch/3DS remake proposal, I feel like someone should do a classic remake proposal, whence why I'm doing this. There are 3 options. Option 1 splits all major remakes. Option 2 only splits major remakes that would be in a strict definition. Option 3 is the "do nothing" option. Proposer: SONIC123CDMANIA+&K(B&ATSA) (talk) Option 1
Option 2
Option 3
CommentsWhat exactly do you mean by "classic remake" here? That's much too vague. Doc von Schmeltwick (talk) 12:48, May 12, 2023 (EDT) What games would fall in the scope of this proposal? Spectrogram (talk) 12:51, May 12, 2023 (EDT) What "major classic remakes" are we talking about here? Which ones "would be in a strict definition"? Are there "minor remakes" we're excluding here? Ahemtoday (talk) 12:55, May 12, 2023 (EDT) Whoa! Already, you 3 ask this! Not being rude, of course. Now, to answer Doc's question, "classic remake" is a remake of a classic game, unlike a "modern remake" which is something like Donkey Kong Country Returns 3DS, or Tropical Freeze Switch. To answer Spectrogram's question, games like Super Mario Bros, Donkey Kong, and so on, would fall in the scope of this proposal. Mario Bros is not included due to there already being a passed proposal for it. To answer Ahemtoday's questions, here's my answers. 1. I'm talking about remakes of a game like Super Mario All-Stars' remakes of SMB1, TLL, 2, & 3 that are still in the articles of the OG game. 2. Strict definition would be something akin to the DKC games mentioned earlier, Luigi's Mansion 3DS, & Poochy & Yoshi's Wooly World. 3. Minor remakes would be like splitting Mario Bros. Classic from Mario Bros. Battle, or Super Mario Bros. with its' FDS version. SONIC123CDMANIA+&K(B&ATSA) (talk) 12:57, May 12, 2023 (CST)
@SONIC123CDMANIA+&K(B&ATSA) One user cannot support to every option at the same time. They should support to at most, one option. PnnyCrygr 00:01, May 13, 2023 (EDT)
I must say, this is probably the first time I've seen a proposer put their support in all options of their proposal. I don't think it's allowed to vote for every option though, because as Waluigi Time said, it's essentially like not voting at all. If every option is given a vote by the same person, it doesn't make a significant change in the standings.
WOAH WOAH WOAH WOAH!!!! JEEZ! This is crazy! Let me try to clear more things up. Waluigi Time, PnnyCygr, Doc, & Arend have good points on voting, but I think on that matter Spectrogram sums it up perfectly. On the topic of what falls under 2, I was talking about how we split modern remakes under a case-by-case basis, option 2 would essentially be like that. It's nice to know that you understood option 1! One last thing. PnnyCygr, that at symbol thing made me get Porplemontage vibes. SONIC123CDMANIA+&K(B&ATSA) (talk) 09:39, May 15, 2023 (CST)
Fine, no one likes this. Can an admin cancel this, then? SONIC123CDMANIA+&K(B&ATSA) (talk) 14:30, May 15, 2023 (CST)
Make changes to MarioWiki's editbox wallpaperTemplate:ProposalOutcome The editbox is the field where one can type their edits into. But the most overlooked cosmetic aspect of the editbox is its wallpaper thing: Those strings of character artwork located at the bottom half of the editbox. Currently, it features 2000s artwork (Luigi, Mario Sunshine with Yoshi, Princess Peach, Luigi, Mario Sunshine with Yoshi), as somehow the wiki was established in the 2000s. The editbox's wallpaper pattern as of now looks like this: If changes were to be made to it, I would elaborate on these three options:
Proposer: PnnyCrygr (talk) Give new changeable designs to the editbox wallpaper
Just update the existing wallpaper design with new Mario franchise artwork
Do nothing
CommentsUsers can personalise their editing field any way they want with some HTML knowledge through a "monobook.css" user subpage. I do agree that the default editing field skin would benefit from an upgrade, but there should be some consensus on it beforehand. -- KOOPA CON CARNE 19:16, May 14, 2023 (EDT) There'd have to be more to the proposed themes than just names for us to vote for changeable designs outright, but we're down to update the default if nothing else, because... well, see our statement. Also... Listen. We get it, a user can customize them on their end, so who cares about the default, right? ...But that's not to say that your average user will customize their background, or even if they know how to do that. Being real here, most people would probably just accept they don't know how to do that, and decide to grin and bear it, and slowly tune it out until it all becomes background noise anyways, just another mild eyebrow-raiser to add to the pile, another thing you just have to kind of insist someone will "get used to" whenever it comes up. Like us, we did that. Well, except that last one. ~Camwoodstock (talk) 22:13, May 14, 2023 (EDT)
Maybe we could use this design from Mario Maker 2? I think it fits very well for an editing field! (Maybe you'd need to remove the SMM2 text on it but otherwise it should be fine) Dinoshi 64 Yoshi, Yoshi! 01:44, May 18, 2023 (EDT)
In the meantime, that background for our proposals space is also tacky as mac-n-cheese pizza. Mama mia. It's me, Mario! (Talk / Stalk) 18:21, May 18, 2023 (EDT) The section option is not good. I wouldn't vote for it unless we have a clear idea what we're replacing it with. It's me, Mario! (Talk / Stalk) 20:28, May 20, 2023 (EDT) @MegaBowser64: Calling the current design a Super Mario Sunshine wallpaper is pretty inaccurate since only one of the artworks is actually pertinent to that game, the Peach artwork being from Mario Party 6 (Peach wore a different outfit in Sunshine) and the Luigi artwork from Super Mario 64 DS (Luigi wasn't even in Sunshine). The current artwork just does a bad job at representing the overall Mario franchise by using a few old and outdated renders, one of which is clearly specific to a particular game due to its inclusion of FLUDD. Hewer (talk · contributions · edit count) 21:30, May 20, 2023 (EDT) I shot up a discussion on Talk:Main Page a while back(Edit: it's been mentioned in a vote) Talk:Main_Page#That_editing_field... because there's no other better place to start the discussion besides maybe a forum thread, but I guess it got overlooked besides a few comments. The link also includes image suggestions. It's me, Mario! (Talk / Stalk) 18:16, May 18, 2023 (EDT) Prioritize the 2001 iteration in Diddy Kong PilotTemplate:ProposalOutcome The 2001 iteration is the only iteration officially announced by Nintendo. Also, the official artwork is based on this one. They planned to have ten background environments in the game, while the 2003 version had only five backgrounds. There was unused splash screens in 2001 iteration, it had a copyright date. While the 2003 iteration is the stage before changing to a Banjo-Kazooie game, and the copyright at the beginning is missing and no copyright date is displayed. Also the voice used within in the game is different, the former is same actors as Diddy Kong Racing and Donkey Kong 64, while the latter used completely different one. The music is also different, the former is brand new (unused in a leaked build, but implemented), while latter is same as Banjo-Pilot. The proposal is moving Diddy Kong Pilot (2001) to simply Diddy Kong Pilot. Proposer: Windy (talk) SupportOppose
Comments
Establish a guideline for citing archived web pagesTemplate:ProposalOutcome I've made a previous proposal about this in the past, but it was unnecessarily complicated. To put this as simply as possible, many online web pages are very likely to be taken down at some point, and many already have; a user may come across an online source which is no longer on the live web, and only exists on an online web archive, the largest of which is the Wayback Machine. To establish consistency when citing pages from these web archives, a guideline should be listed on MarioWiki:Citations, below the template for citing live websites. This is what I believe is the best style to follow for such citations: cite the original, unmodified link to a page as usual, then include a statement in parentheses that lists the page as being archived, with a link to where the web archive hosts the page, a timestamp, and finally, the web archive which was sourced. Below is a template of such a citation (the link to the archived page would be accessed by the word "Archived"):
As an example, the list of rumors and urban legends about Mario already uses this style for the majority of its web page citations. Here is an example from that page:
A note should also be added to MarioWiki:Citations that the precise timestamp for a page from the Wayback Machine, the most common web archive source, can be found by examining the date in the URL; for the above example, 20210309100159 can be read as 2021-03-09 10:01:59, and should be formatted as March 9, 2021, 10:01:59 UTC. To clarify the proposal, this should not be considered a strict rule that must be followed, nor a necessity for every citation of a web page, but simply as a guideline to follow in case a page has already been taken down, or if a link to an archived version of a page is being added to a citation. Proposer: ThePowerPlayer (talk) Support
OpposeCommentsI am sick of these “active” links that are really dead or 404 links. This proposal acknowledges said statement of mine. PnnyCrygr 17:53, May 18, 2023 (EDT) @ThePowerPlayer Did you give this a 2-week deadline? 'Cause that's for talk page proposals only, normal proposals get one week and so this proposal should end today. SmokedChili (talk) 07:51, May 24, 2023 (EDT)
Something worth noting: In the case of Flipnote Hatena stuff specifically, the Internet Archive will not do, as they're blacklisted from the Wayback Machine. Instead, however, someone made an external archive of Flipnote Hatena flipnotes called the Sudomemo archive. We've used it before on the Yoichi Kotabe article for his Mario 25th Anniversary flipnote, and nobody seems to object to that one; thusly, should we include something about "if trying to link an old Flipnote Studio flipnote, you may also use the Sudomemo archive"? ~Camwoodstock (talk) 13:57, May 25, 2023 (EDT)
I feel the need to point out that I have heard tell that certain influential corporate entities are currently making efforts to have the web archive taken down for whatever selfish reasons, so I would caution against full reliance on it. Doc von Schmeltwick (talk) 13:35, May 29, 2023 (EDT)
Change full names of crossover characters to the more often used shortened versions in article titlesTemplate:ProposalOutcome This proposal is similar to this one about Conker the Squirrel and this one about Professor Elvin Gadd, except this time, the targets are the many Sonic the Hedgehog characters who appear in the Mario & Sonic games. In these games, the characters are almost always referred to by their shortened names (e.g. Sonic and Tails), but for some strange reason, the wiki article titles don't reflect this (e.g. Sonic the Hedgehog and Miles "Tails" Prower). This is also true of Sonic's Super Smash Bros. appearances, which simply call him "Sonic". Speaking of which, I'm lumping Fox McCloud into this proposal too for the same reason: the Smash games always just call him Fox. Pages that will be renamed by this proposal:
Redirects using the full names will be kept, of course. Proposer: Hewer (talk) Support
Oppose
CommentsJet from Mario Tennis should be prioritised over the Sonic character as he is a Mario character. -- KOOPA CON CARNE 13:40, May 28, 2023 (EDT)
Don't you think "Shadow (character)" might be confusing due to the existence of Shadow the Dog, a WarioWare character? rend (talk) (edits) 18:57, May 29, 2023 (EDT)
@SeanWheeler No offence, but did you even read the proposal before opposing? I am suggesting to move Jet the Hawk to Jet (Sonic the Hedgehog). There's precedent for this with articles like Slime (Dragon Quest) and Ring (Sonic the Hedgehog). And there's also precedent for moving full names to shortened versions, like Conker the Squirrel, Professor Elvin Gadd, Princess Rosalina, and the Donkey Kong Country animal friends. I'm not saying that the full names don't exist or that we should remove all mention of them, just that we should move the article titles to the more common names (we aren't about to move Mario to Mario Mario or Bowser to King Bowser Koopa). Hewer (talk · contributions · edit count) 05:39, May 31, 2023 (EDT)
Lol, this is starting to look more like a colab'd professorial thesis (whatever that is) than the comments section of an unremarkable proposal on a wiki about a series of children's video games, do you see how much this sentence is sticking out? BOWSER... (talk) 16:54, June 1, 2023 (EDT)
While I do agree with the proposal in theory, I have a thought: correct me if I'm wrong, but couldn't this line of reasoning later be used to remove "Kong" from all of the Kong characters' names (save
let us be changing the person namings on internet land (Translation: Let's change the titles for these characters' articles soon.) BOWSER... (talk) 16:11, June 4, 2023 (EDT)
This proposal is now officially OVAH, can someone wrap it up I don't know how. BOWSER... (talk) 11:43, June 5, 2023 (EDT) Establish a standard for long course listings in articles for characters/enemies/items/etc.
The number of courses listed in this paragraph was getting so wild that I had to condense it with the "as well as in these courses' variants" statement. Problem is, this sacrifices specificity. The proposal aims to introduce a guideline whereby lists of this ilk are more digestibly integrated in prose writing. To this end, I propose two options, each based on a format already used on some articles; the preferred format will be applied when the amount of courses listed is 7 or higher. Option 1: Bullet-point lists The subject's general description for a particular game is followed by a bulleted list of courses in said game, like so:
If a subject displays different traits across one game, such as having different colours or behaviours, and these traits are described on one article as opposed to being split between articles (e.g. Bandits/Coin Bandits in Yoshi's Island), each course in the list is followed in brackets by whatever variations of this enemy appear in the course. In other words, if a subject has traits X, Y, and Z across levels A, B, C, D etc. in a game, then the level list has the following form:
Option 2: Courses show up in-line when hovering/tapping a certain phrase When the seventh course is reached in a list, the courses listed from that point on are being integrated in a piece of hoverable text.
Notice that the phrase "and some of their variants" has a dashed underline. Putting your cursor over it (on desktop) or tapping it (on mobile) reveals these course variants. If the number of courses slated to be included in hoverable text is too small (e.g. the seventh course is the only one left to mention), previous courses in the list can be integrated in the hoverable text at the editor's discretion. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Note: Neither guideline will apply where a subject's course appearances are described individually, like in the Skewer article. Proposer: Koopa con Carne (talk) Option 1
Option 2Just list them in a sentence outrightIt doesn't matterCommentsI do not see the point in standardizing it, really Spectrogram (talk) 14:09, May 25, 2023 (EDT)
Split the remaining Mario Party and Mario Party 2 mini-game variants from each otherTemplate:ProposalOutcome Building off of a discussion and proposal from the Balloon Burst talk page, I'm proposing we aim to split off the rest of the mini-games shared between Mario Party and Mario Party 2. While many of those games play almost identically between both games, many of them still feature various rule differences. Few examples:
Those are just a few examples. Several other games feature differences too. And while there is the argument that "they still play the same at the core", a few things to counter that are the fact that both Mario Party: The Top 100 and Mario Party Superstars actively acknowledge the different versions of each mini-game, regardless of whether or not they had differing names or not. The Top 100 featured the MP2 version of Handcar Havoc while Superstars featured the MP version. And this extends to games with differing names, such as Hexagon Heat and Desert Dash to Mushroom Mix-Up and Dungeon Dash. And finally, this would be consistent with several other mini-games; the aforementioned ones that share the same basic concept, but have different names to the notable examples of Bowser's Bigger Blast and Beach Volleyball, which appear similar to identical to Bowser's Big Blast and Beach Volley Folly. All that being said, I don't think it's that unreasonable to split the rest of these mini-games into their own articles. The following is a list of mini-games that would be split if we split all:
For the second option, these mini-games would be split based on having rule differences: And as per the comment below, the third option would split mini-games with a different names across several languages: As for the naming convention, I simply say we use the game as the identifier (Crane Game (Mario Party) to Crane Game (Mario Party 2)). It may not be how we covered Balloon Burst, mainly because many of the mini-games share the same category. Some could follow similar suits (Crazy Cutters (4-Player) to Crazy Cutters (Battle)), but I feel the titles work best. If anyone has any further thoughts or suggestions, let me know. Proposer: Tails777 (talk) Split all mini-gamesSplit only mini-games with rule differences
Split mini-games with regional name differences
Split nothing
CommentsSo is the idea that this would move Balloon Burst (4-Player) to Balloon Burst (Mario Party) and Balloon Burst (2 vs. 2) to Balloon Burst (Mario Party 2)? I'd support that but I don't think the Balloon Burst proposal is technically old enough to change the names. Hewer (talk · contributions · edit count) 14:35, June 2, 2023 (EDT)
I'm also noticing a few games that are similar to the point where absolutely nothing changes (Tipsy Tourney, Shy Guy Says, Slot Car Derby etc). If people are opposed to splitting all of them, I can make an option to only split those that feature significant changes. Tails777 Talk to me! @MegaBowser64 Part of the reason I'm proposing this is because we already have many minigames that are already split, despite being nearly identical. Mushroom Mix-Up and Hexagon Heat feature no gameplay differences between versions, the only reason they're split is because they have different names. And we just recently split Balloon Burst too, which also had the same gameplay focus as in Mario Party, with the only difference being the change in category, going from a 4-Player minigame to a 2-vs-2 minigame. Otherwise, the goal is still to burst the balloon fastest and the controls are identical. And with that minigame, even the name itself was the exact same. Beyond those examples, Desert Dash and Dungeon Dash play the exact same, Tightrope Treachery and Rainbow Run play the exact same, and Mario Bandstand and Toad Bandstand are in the same category as Balloon Burst; play the same, but different category. Tails777 Talk to me! Face Lift in the first party game features you distorting Bowser's face; the next game has you distorting other characters' faces. This and other examples like this cannot make a minigame version distinguishable from another. PnnyCrygr 21:58, June 2, 2023 (EDT)
I actually think there should be an option to split the minigames based on their differing Japanese names (which also was a factor on why Balloon Burst was split). That would be the following: rend (talk) (edits) 03:19, June 3, 2023 (EDT)
@Waluigi Time Except Balloon Burst doesn't have any gameplay differences. The category difference doesn't change the fact that the controls to bursting the balloon are the same and the goal of bursting the balloon first is still the same. I don't exactly see how Balloon Burst is a gameplay difference when the core concepts are the same across both games. Again, my points on Crane Game and Bowl Over are that they actually change over the course of two games; requiring the solo player to eliminate all three other players instead of just one. The requirements to end a game I feel are more significant when compared to Balloon Burst. I concede that stuff like Tipsy Tourney or Shy Guy Says would be a bit excessive, but for the examples where the rules do change, I feel that should be at least a bigger focus. Tails777 Talk to me!
@Mari0fan100: I'm assuming you misunderstood the intent of the "regional name differences" option so I'll try to clarify. The option isn't meant to split minigames that were in one game with different names in different languages/regions, it's meant to split minigames with different names between games. For example, Hot Bob-omb has a different Japanese name between Mario Party 1 and 2, so if that option passed it would split the MP1 and MP2 versions of the minigame. This doesn't apply to MP10 or Island Tour because none of their minigames were returning from previous games afaik. Hewer (talk · contributions · edit count) 14:05, June 9, 2023 (EDT) Prohibit IPs from editingTemplate:ProposalOutcome This is my first proposal. I am a new user here, and of course I registered an account to be part of the community here. The reason I am making this proposal is because IP addresses are less likely to make constructive edits. That's not to say they never do, but I'm pointing out how edits such as this or this have formatting mistakes. If they're logged in, it would be more easier to keep track of their name and edits and guide them along the way, like I had been taught a few things while making edits here. This minor restriction won't do much harm because making an account only requires a username and password, unlike several other websites that require you to provide an email address and sometimes more. Proposer: CoolNintendo (talk) Support
OpposeCommentsClarify how to italicize merchandise titles in articlesTemplate:ProposalOutcome This is what MarioWiki:Manual of Style currently states regarding italicization of media titles in articles:
This policy does a good job covering the vast majority of media (i.e. all digital games, audiovisual media, and print media), with the only type of media not covered being physical merchandise. All of this media is listed in Template:Merchandise, which has led me to notice inconsistencies in how the titles of merchandise are italicized. For example:
This proposal aims to fix these problems by standardizing how merchandise is italicized. I've tried to keep the proposal as simple as possible; my apologies if this is unnecessarily complicated. I want to limit unnecessary voting options, so if one thing comes out of this, it's clear that the titles of physical tabletop games (board games, card games, and others such as Donkey Kong Jenga) should be completely italicized, because they are objectively games just like any digital game, and they should thus fall under existing italicization policy. What's left is to decide how the titles of other merchandise types should be italicized, if at all. As a clarification, only official merchandise titles should be considered for italicization, i.e. titles that are clearly displayed on the merchandise's packaging, on the item itself, or otherwise from a reliable source, such as the manufacturer's website; a title from a source such as an Amazon or eBay listing is too unreliable, and a unitalicized, general description of the item can be used instead in those cases. There are three notable features of many Super Mario franchise merchandise:
Note that in this context, brand names should not be confused with the names of the companies that manufacture and/or sell the brands, such as First4Figures, Mattel, or Taco Bell; these should be left unitalicized. As an example, Freiberger is a company, Pizzatainment is one of their brands, and Triple Salami Explosion is one of the products sold under that brand. Because of these features, I see four possible choices for italicization of the titles of non-tabletop-game merchandise:
My personal choice from these options would be to italicize the names of any unique brand names and Super Mario games or series, but leave any other words unitalicized. I believe this would be the best balance between leaving all merchandise titles subject to a lack of standardization and brazenly italicizing merchandise titles where it may be unwarranted, though I can see a valid argument being made for most of the other options. The option that receives the most votes should be explicitly listed as a guideline on MarioWiki:Manual of Style, under the "Italicizing titles" header. Please bring up any points of confusion or contention in the comments. Proposer: ThePowerPlayer (talk) Fully italicize the entire titles of all merchandiseFully italicize titles of tabletop games, and italicize only the names of unique brands and Super Mario games or series otherwise
Fully italicize titles of tabletop games, and italicize only the names of Super Mario games or series otherwise
Fully italicize titles of only tabletop games, and do not italicize titles of other merchandise
Do not italicize titles of any merchandise whatsoeverDo not establish any guidelines regarding merchandise titlesCommentsAccording to Grammarly, titles of board games and card games shouldn't be italicized, but Wikipedia italicizes board game titles. Shouldn't only the name of a franchise or video game in the title of a board game or card game be italicized to be grammatically correct? Dwhitney (talk) 12:30, June 10, 2023 (EDT)
|