The standards for naming pages on the wiki, particularly those relating to enemies and items, are a bloody mess. If something is not named in the game itself, you can bet the name won't be sourced and that it will be impossible to infer where it comes from. This needs to change.
Lol. Who cares?
1: Mario nerds, the demographic this site ostensibly services, do care. Users routinely ask the source of a given article's name on its talk and the wiki has been accused of making up "fanon" for accurate, but obscure, information.
2: It's the right thing to do. Applying a strong, consistent standard for sourcing names ensures transparency and means we don't have to constantly justify ourselves, and perhaps less obviously, reduce odds of deliberate misinformation or poor but non-malicious judgement calls. If the wiki can't do the quality control for something as basic as the identifier of its articles, then what does that mean for the rest of its content?
To take an actual example, there was some kiddy who made his entire editing career of moving {{conjecture}}-tagged pages to "official names" he made-up. As nobody nothered to quality control, the attempt wasn't noticed until the rest of the internet had assumed those names to be the "real" ones. This should not happen again.
Do we really have to cite sources for things that are in the game itself?
Most of the time, citing sources for things that are named directly in the game or bundled material is not necessary. Sourcing the Mario Kart 8 kart parts, for example, would be a waste of time as the names are right there on the screen.
But in some cases, citing sources for a name is prudent, and thus warranted. If the name for a thing isn't given in a standardised fashion and only comes from an easily missed NPC dialogue, it's a Good Idea to put where it comes from and a direct quotation using the reference tags. This also applies to easily-overlooked passages in the bundled material (see everyone's favourite husbando Sunglasses Vendor).
What sources are considered usable? In case of conflict, which name should I use?
Mariowiki:Naming has this described in more detail than is humanly necessary, but the gist is Game > English > Non-English and Nintendo Power > Prima.
Should foreign names be held to the same standards of sourcing?
Yes. Infact, I'd argue they should be held to an higher standard since we routinely get idiots running the English name through Google translate, but that discussion is better off in another thread...
Can I just mention the source in the edit summary?
No. Sources should follow the standards outlined on MarioWiki:Citation Policy.
Since most pages were created in 2007 by children with no regard to these "reliability" and "quality control" things, so the exact source may be hard to find. If you dig in the history and/or talk and manage to find the name is from "the Prima Guide", it's ok to write "... named in the Prima Guide" somewhere in the article and tagged with {{pageneeded}}, although the reference hould be expanded as soon as the relevant document is available.
butthurt much
THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT OKAY
Got no clue as to where a name come from? Post your request and I'll edit the OP!
Lol. Who cares?
1: Mario nerds, the demographic this site ostensibly services, do care. Users routinely ask the source of a given article's name on its talk and the wiki has been accused of making up "fanon" for accurate, but obscure, information.
2: It's the right thing to do. Applying a strong, consistent standard for sourcing names ensures transparency and means we don't have to constantly justify ourselves, and perhaps less obviously, reduce odds of deliberate misinformation or poor but non-malicious judgement calls. If the wiki can't do the quality control for something as basic as the identifier of its articles, then what does that mean for the rest of its content?
To take an actual example, there was some kiddy who made his entire editing career of moving {{conjecture}}-tagged pages to "official names" he made-up. As nobody nothered to quality control, the attempt wasn't noticed until the rest of the internet had assumed those names to be the "real" ones. This should not happen again.
Do we really have to cite sources for things that are in the game itself?
Most of the time, citing sources for things that are named directly in the game or bundled material is not necessary. Sourcing the Mario Kart 8 kart parts, for example, would be a waste of time as the names are right there on the screen.
But in some cases, citing sources for a name is prudent, and thus warranted. If the name for a thing isn't given in a standardised fashion and only comes from an easily missed NPC dialogue, it's a Good Idea to put where it comes from and a direct quotation using the reference tags. This also applies to easily-overlooked passages in the bundled material (see everyone's favourite husbando Sunglasses Vendor).
What sources are considered usable? In case of conflict, which name should I use?
Mariowiki:Naming has this described in more detail than is humanly necessary, but the gist is Game > English > Non-English and Nintendo Power > Prima.
Should foreign names be held to the same standards of sourcing?
Yes. Infact, I'd argue they should be held to an higher standard since we routinely get idiots running the English name through Google translate, but that discussion is better off in another thread...
Can I just mention the source in the edit summary?
No. Sources should follow the standards outlined on MarioWiki:Citation Policy.
Since most pages were created in 2007 by children with no regard to these "reliability" and "quality control" things, so the exact source may be hard to find. If you dig in the history and/or talk and manage to find the name is from "the Prima Guide", it's ok to write "... named in the Prima Guide" somewhere in the article and tagged with {{pageneeded}}, although the reference hould be expanded as soon as the relevant document is available.
butthurt much
THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT OKAY
Got no clue as to where a name come from? Post your request and I'll edit the OP!
The enemies introduced in Yoshi's Island DS. The bouncies are named in an hint block early in the game, but what about the rest?Mr. Dice,Sir Domino, Super Block (enemy), and Ruler (all from Donkey Kong 64) seem made-up, but there's always the niggling suspicion they might be from an obscure strategy guide. Anyone willing to verify? <----I asked the page creator of Mr. Dice and Sir Domino, and he responded he doesn't remember and that they're probably made up., Turn out they're from Prima, hurp.- Hawkmouth
The Yoshi's Story enemies]