Big Mac
Explorer
The big problem with Wikipedia editing policy, is that like everything else it is voted on by the masses. From what I understand, the anti-D&D delitionists have quitely moved the goalposts by getting policies changed and then used the altered policies as arguments for deletion.
I don't dispute the fact that a lot of D&D articles are badly cited and a lot of them are even badly written. But to me the solution to bad articles is to fix the articles. The people who run around tagging random things for deletion add nothing to Wikipedia. It would be much better if they worked with the various D&D related projects and tagged articles to be edited, rewritten or for citations to be added.
As for notablility, I would say that articles on the official D&D websites (Athas.org, Beyond the Moons, Planewalker, etc) should definately qualify as a source to "prove notability" and that the well respected, but unofficial sources (Dragonlance Nexus, Canonfire, Candlekeep, etc) should also qualify.
A lot of bad editing on Wikipedia is down to ignorance. I wish that the deletionists would stop AFDing articles and instead focus on going to people's talk pages and pointing them in the direction of tutorials that show them how to write better articles.
For me, the thing that is making me give up on Wikipedia, is the quasi-religious belief by the delitionist-horde that dumping bad articles and undoing the work of bad editors is better than education and rewrites. As far as I'm concerned a bad article is almost always better than no article. A tag that says "this article doesn't meet Wikipedia's standards..." is enough of a warning for me to know that article can't be trusted yet. These people should be creating tags similar to stub tags that can be used to flag unreliable and incomplete information. And articles tagged as bad should not be automatically deleted.
Wikipedia editing should be fun. Wikipedia D&D article projects should be as fun as things like ENWorld's Creature Catalogue. People should be fixing bad articles because they love D&D. People should be joining these projects and getting taught how to cite things properly. Wikipedia editiors are unpaid volunteers and shouldn't be forced to edit articles at gunpoint. That sort of stuff takes all the fun out of it.
There are always going to be some articles on Wikipedia that do deserve to be deleted or merged, but the delitionists have gone beyond this and have put themselves on a soap box. There are people out there with great D&D knowledge, but a poor understanding of Wikipedia rules. These people, if Wikipedia could get them, would create great first drafts that need a major clean up. But the deletionist policy makes these people feel that if you don't dot you 'i's and cross your 't's, you are an idiot and should not be allowed on Wikipedia.
If Wikipedia is going to become better, it needs editors that are experts in their field. And if some of those experts are bad Wikipedia editors they need to be paired up with someone else who can follow them around and fix their articles. Deletionists take people away from this sort of thing and cause fire-fighting "save this article" wars.
In the long run, I believe that deletionists are very bad for Wikipedia. I think they could kill it.
I actually prefer Dragonlance Lexicon: http://www.dlnexus.com/lexicon/ to the Dragonlance Wiki, as it is hosted by Dragonlance Nexus and has more support from the fan community.
Thanks for mentioning Spelljammer Wiki. I'm the guy that created it. I used to do editing on Wikipedia, but got fed up with deletionists, so decided to do something that would not self-destruct.
Spelljammer Wiki is a bit sparse at the moment. I'm still getting the basic framework built and haven't worked on my policies yet. There was a big delay when I created it and I'm now fairly busy at work. But I am still working on it and will try my best to work with other wikis and official websites for D&D worlds.
(I wanted to get the Spelljammer Wiki onto Beyond the Moons, but that was not possible at the time I created it, for technical reasons. If Static - the owner of Beyond the Moons - ever wants to host the SJ wiki over there, I will move all my articles across and cease work on the Wikia version. I believe that ties with official - or leading - fan websites is the best way to add "respectability" to these wikis.)
It might interest you to know that someone over at Wikia Gaming (who are mostly Computer RPG gamers) suggested to me that all D&D wikias should be merged into one big D&D wiki (to help consolodate the pool of editors). I know this guy and he definatly wasn't being malicious. But he was concerned that these wikis (more specifically the Wikia ones) don't have many editors working on them. (I told him that different D&D Campaign Settings sometimes have conflicting canon and that a big wiki would be more likely to have edit wars. I certainly don't want to work on a D&D wiki where the 'location' of the 'Rock of Bral' gets changed 6 times a week.
)
I don't dispute the fact that a lot of D&D articles are badly cited and a lot of them are even badly written. But to me the solution to bad articles is to fix the articles. The people who run around tagging random things for deletion add nothing to Wikipedia. It would be much better if they worked with the various D&D related projects and tagged articles to be edited, rewritten or for citations to be added.
As for notablility, I would say that articles on the official D&D websites (Athas.org, Beyond the Moons, Planewalker, etc) should definately qualify as a source to "prove notability" and that the well respected, but unofficial sources (Dragonlance Nexus, Canonfire, Candlekeep, etc) should also qualify.
A lot of bad editing on Wikipedia is down to ignorance. I wish that the deletionists would stop AFDing articles and instead focus on going to people's talk pages and pointing them in the direction of tutorials that show them how to write better articles.
For me, the thing that is making me give up on Wikipedia, is the quasi-religious belief by the delitionist-horde that dumping bad articles and undoing the work of bad editors is better than education and rewrites. As far as I'm concerned a bad article is almost always better than no article. A tag that says "this article doesn't meet Wikipedia's standards..." is enough of a warning for me to know that article can't be trusted yet. These people should be creating tags similar to stub tags that can be used to flag unreliable and incomplete information. And articles tagged as bad should not be automatically deleted.
Wikipedia editing should be fun. Wikipedia D&D article projects should be as fun as things like ENWorld's Creature Catalogue. People should be fixing bad articles because they love D&D. People should be joining these projects and getting taught how to cite things properly. Wikipedia editiors are unpaid volunteers and shouldn't be forced to edit articles at gunpoint. That sort of stuff takes all the fun out of it.
There are always going to be some articles on Wikipedia that do deserve to be deleted or merged, but the delitionists have gone beyond this and have put themselves on a soap box. There are people out there with great D&D knowledge, but a poor understanding of Wikipedia rules. These people, if Wikipedia could get them, would create great first drafts that need a major clean up. But the deletionist policy makes these people feel that if you don't dot you 'i's and cross your 't's, you are an idiot and should not be allowed on Wikipedia.
If Wikipedia is going to become better, it needs editors that are experts in their field. And if some of those experts are bad Wikipedia editors they need to be paired up with someone else who can follow them around and fix their articles. Deletionists take people away from this sort of thing and cause fire-fighting "save this article" wars.
In the long run, I believe that deletionists are very bad for Wikipedia. I think they could kill it.
Robbastard said:There are some good D&D-based alternatives to Wikipedia:
D&D wiki: http://dnd.wikia.com/wiki/Main_Page
Dark Sun wiki: http://www.darksunwiki.com/darksun/index.php/Main_Page
Dragonlance wiki: http://www.wikia.com/wiki/DragonLance
Forgotten Realms wiki: http://www.wikia.com/wiki/Forgotten_Realms
Greyhawk wiki: http://www.canonfire.com/wiki/index.php?title=Main_Page
Spelljammer wiki: http://spelljammer.wikia.com/wiki/Main_Page
Sorry, but I didn't have much luck finding an active wiki for Planescape, Ravenloft, or Mystara.
I actually prefer Dragonlance Lexicon: http://www.dlnexus.com/lexicon/ to the Dragonlance Wiki, as it is hosted by Dragonlance Nexus and has more support from the fan community.
Thanks for mentioning Spelljammer Wiki. I'm the guy that created it. I used to do editing on Wikipedia, but got fed up with deletionists, so decided to do something that would not self-destruct.
Spelljammer Wiki is a bit sparse at the moment. I'm still getting the basic framework built and haven't worked on my policies yet. There was a big delay when I created it and I'm now fairly busy at work. But I am still working on it and will try my best to work with other wikis and official websites for D&D worlds.
(I wanted to get the Spelljammer Wiki onto Beyond the Moons, but that was not possible at the time I created it, for technical reasons. If Static - the owner of Beyond the Moons - ever wants to host the SJ wiki over there, I will move all my articles across and cease work on the Wikia version. I believe that ties with official - or leading - fan websites is the best way to add "respectability" to these wikis.)
It might interest you to know that someone over at Wikia Gaming (who are mostly Computer RPG gamers) suggested to me that all D&D wikias should be merged into one big D&D wiki (to help consolodate the pool of editors). I know this guy and he definatly wasn't being malicious. But he was concerned that these wikis (more specifically the Wikia ones) don't have many editors working on them. (I told him that different D&D Campaign Settings sometimes have conflicting canon and that a big wiki would be more likely to have edit wars. I certainly don't want to work on a D&D wiki where the 'location' of the 'Rock of Bral' gets changed 6 times a week.
