- Professions (World of Warcraft) (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) — (AfD)
From what I can gather in the delete discussion absolutely no consensus could have been made. Most of the delete votes where challenged, and the people who voted delete gave no explanation as to why it should be deleted, only clamming things that had no substantial merit. As far as I can see, the article doesn't break WP:NOT as claimed, seeing as it does not tell you how to play a game, only what each thing is. Closing admin also seems biased in his decision. Havok (T/C/e/c) 14:34, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- Comment as closer. Havok, assume good faith, please. The views of the majority of contributors were that it failed WP:NOT. Your own vote did not countermand this; it simply made vague insinuations about the nominator having bad faith, and that the article wasn't a game guide. The other keep votes (which were, note, in a significant minority) were "the information does not automatically qualify as game guide material" (no reason given to keep); "too big to go in the main article" (not a decent reason to keep); another one making vague mentions of a conspiracy (" ... seems to me that there is a group of Wikipedians that want almost zero game content on Misplaced Pages .. ") and saying that it's useful so it should stay (not particularly valid); and, um, that's it. There were a lot more deletion arguments, and they were (mostly) sound. Proto::type 14:46, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- Overturn Deletion Deletion arguments such as "It's fancruft" and "It fails WP:NOT"? Those aren't arguments, those are statements. It was Proof by assertion. Also, saying "This is not a game guide" IS a reason to keep. The article was nominated for breaking WP:NOT. If it doesn't break WP:NOT, then there is no reason to delete it! Additionally, nobody but the keepers actually attempted to defend their claims. It seemed to me like most of the deleters basically said "No you're wrong" to any challenges and then promptly forgot about the article. As fun as it is to assume good faith, it's getting REALLY hard lately. -Ryanbomber 15:00, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- I'm sorry, Ryan, but if you're characterising the 'delete' arguments as being "It fails WP:NOT", at least this referred to policy. The 'keep' arguments (Which we can similarly reduce to "This is not a game guide!") didn't even manage to find evidence that the article didn't fail WP:NOT. Burden of proof was on the 'keep'ers to prove the article didn't fail WP:NOT, and instead, they settled for flat out insisting it did not, with no evidence to back this. There was evidence provided to back the article failing WP:NOT provided - quotes, and suchlike. As fun as it is to resort to ad hominem insinuations, they're not the best way to ensure an article is kept on AFD. Proto::type 15:27, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- You're citing proofs or lack thereof in an argument that is completely subjective. Also, you're ignoring the fact that several examples HAVE been given of what the difference between game guides and examples of games are (I recall giving an example of Mario and jumping to be exact.) Also, your burden of proof is on the wrong side. The accusation was made without any real proof other then "it fails it because I said so." We gave examples as to how it's not a game guide, and they completely ignored us, stating "no, it's a game guide." -Ryanbomber 19:27, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- Articles at AfD are assumed to fail all requisite tests in the absence of specific evidence to the contrary. NPOV is the exception - as one can only demonstrate the existence, not the absence, of bias. Chris cheese whine 23:35, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- Providing instructions on how to be the best miner, or crafter, or alchemist would be a game guide. Describing mining, crafting, or alchemy in the game is not a game guide, any more than describing how to move a rook in chess is a game guide. And several of the delete arguments like "100% fanboy cruft" and "excessive coverage of a topic on which we already have a supersufficiency ofarticles" are hardly valid. Frankly, I can't find any deletion arguments I consider genuine, but eliminating the totally invalid ones (such as the fanboy cruft ones), puts the keep and deletes at the same level. Not a significant minority. AfD's are not a vote anyway, but it seems to me that you are giving far too much weight to insubtantial arguments. The fact is, professions are a completely valid part of World of Warcraft, a key and integral component to almost every character. Mister.Manticore 16:35, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- Upon further reading, I can't even assume good faith here. I am quite concerned that the closing admin possesses and anti-Warcraft bias and was unable to evalulate the discussion fairly. See User:Proto/gc for " *Warcraft. Just, all of it. Characters, places, items, everything". Anybody who writes that should not be acting as an admin in any discussion related to World of Warcraft. It's one thing to express an opinion, it's another thing to have such a blatantly negative feeling and then use the tools of authority granted by the computer to spread it. Mister.Manticore 07:50, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- I'm beginning to agree with the idea that the people making the decision may not have the right approach to take it. And having looked over Proto's page I find some very strange things. The most obvious problem is the following reasoning, so I'll focus on this, but there are other problems there. "Divide the world into precisely two groups: those who own and play Game X, and those who don't: Those who own Game X: already have the game manual which contains all this information. Actual usefulness of article for this group: none. Those who do not own Game X: have no possible use for, need of, or interest in, the information in the article. Actual usefulness of article for this group: none. Total segment of world population that this article is actually useful for: none. The only possible group left would be those who lost their manuals and those who pirated their copies of Game X: the former group is very tiny and the latter group - whatever their size - can find assistance in their piracy elsewhere." Lets try illustrating this with the following example which would apply if we wanted the get rid of the sciencecruft which currently infests wikipedia, I'm going to choose Zonohedron#Zonohedra_from_Minkowski_sums: "Divide the world into precisely two groups: those who need to know about Zonohedra from Minkowski sums, and those who don't: Those who need to know will be able to read papers from other mathematicians giving a much better explanation than wikipedia can (or if it is simple enough to explain on wikipedia it will be in text books and on maths websites). Actual usefulness of article for this group: none. Those who do not need to know about it have no possible use for, need of, or interest in, the information in the article. Actual usefulness of article for this group: none. Total segment of world population that this article is actually useful for: none. The only possible group left would be those who cannot afford textbooks and don't have access to a library (and all universities have libraries and will possibly recommend websites on the subject) - this group is tiny." Perhaps this isn't a very obsure topic, but there are much, much more obsure topics on maths and the sciences on wikipedia. I think they are a good thing, evidently Proto doesn't. (This isn't an attack on Proto, just on this concept.) If this sort of argument is why Proto believes the page should be deleted then perhaps he should step back and think. "Articles must be useful" isn't even a wikipedia policy. Raoul 17:01, 27 November 2006 (UTC)
- The argument is a http://www.fallacyfiles.org/eitheror.html fallacy as well, I think. There could be people who are looking into the game for fun, to waste time, or because they may want to join it. I do it all the time for the most random of topics, and I usually explore all of the sub-articles on said topic. -Ryanbomber 00:38, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
- Endorse deletion. Keep proponents didn't even try to explain how this aspect of the game is notable outside the game itself. Even aside from that, the article is unverifiable - information gained by playing a MMORPG is not reasonably repeatable by the average reader in the same way that we can reasonably expect readers to buy a book and open it at page 94, so that doesn't count as verifiability even within the limits of using primary sources to write an article. Comparisons made with articles on games such as chess and football are invalid, because people have written hundreds of articles and books (i.e. secondary sources) dedicated to their rules, gameplay and strategy. WoW has no such corpus of research which we can use to write an encyclopaedia article. --Sam Blanning 18:25, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- The article isn't notable outside the game. It's not claiming to be. It's describing the game in greater detail due to the overflow from the main article. As for verifiability, that can (could have been?) arranged if someone had brought it up at the right time. A bit too late now, unless this gets reversed. We could have cited worldofwarcraft.com, thottbot.com, and (ironically) strategy guides. As for "lack of research," your analogy is just as invalid considering Chess is around two thousand years old and World of Warcraft is around two, not to mention the fact that World of Warcraft is much more linear then Chess. Everybody starts at level 1 and climbs all the way to level 60 in World of Warcraft. The only things all chess games have in common is the starting point and Checkmate (and even then, there's Stalemates...) There's not much to write in terms of topics that require hundreds of pages and several books from different authors to explain. Oh, and even though you say people haven't written many books/articles/what have you on Warcraft, there ARE a few out there, so this discussion is moot anyway. -Ryanbomber 19:27, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- If you can find these sources and use them I doubt there will be an issue with recreation. JoshuaZ 15:09, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
- But it needs to be notable outside the game for its own article. There is a lot more to finishing a chess game than checkmate or stalemate. Chris cheesewhine 19:42, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- First of all, I don't know of any policies that says anything like that. Second of all, the checkmate/stalemate thing is exactly my point - Chess has a ton of info on it because there's so much to study because it is such an open-ended game. Warcraft is not. This does not make Warcraft an inferior game, this just makes the topics to actually study smaller. This doesn't invalidate Warcraft's meaning, it just states why there is no real "research" on it. You might as well start looking for someone's Thesis on "The Flintstones." -Ryanbomber 20:42, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- Excuse me? This isn't verifiable? The information is available for anybody to view. One of the persons commenting on it even made that clear in the very beginning. Sure, to confirm it, you would need a World of Warcraft account, but to confirm most of the information about say, Pluto you'd need a telescope. But if you just want to find it elsewhere, try Google. It's easily verifiable. Sources were not, and never were the problem. Bringing it up as an objection does not make sense. Explaining how it's notable outside the game itself isn't really necessary. World of Warcraft is unquestionably notable. That you play a character in World of Warcraft is a given, thus explaining a major component in your characters is the way to do it. Furthermore, the comparisons to chess do not stop at checkmate or statemate. I'm rather more concerned about chess openings. How does the Latvian Gambit matter to anyone who doesn't play chess? The Two Knights Defense? There's a whole 174 entry category ! I can understand describingthe concept of openings in chess. It's the same thing as this article really. But does every one of those openings really qualify? I don't think so. Fortunately, there's only the one World of Warcraft article about. Mister.Manticore 22:49, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- If it were "correct" then this review would not exist, would it? -Ryanbomber 20:42, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- Anyone can come here and put something up for review, if merely listing it here indicated incorrectness in the closure then we wouldn't bother having any discussion. --pgk 20:54, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- Exactly. Neither side is "correct" just because they exist. Heck, neither side is really "correct" anyway. This isn't a yes/no discussion. -Ryanbomber 02:40, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- No that's just playing with words, Seraphimblade is expressing his opinion that the closer made the right call and to him is wasn't a close call. --pgk 09:41, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- Could you explain which user's comments you believe that consensus was based on? Was it the people saying it was fancruft? Mister.Manticore 22:49, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- My personal evaluation is delete wins 5-0½, hence the debate was properly closed. Endorse deletion. No reason there can't just be a short list in the main WoW article. Chris cheese whine 23:19, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- Could you explain that conclusion? Where do you get your numbers from? Why are you dismissing the keep
votes arguments entirely? And the reason why a short list in the main article isn't sufficient is that it's woefully incomplete at merely a paragraph, and any longer would create article bloat. Mister.Manticore 23:39, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- What votes would those be? AfD isn't a straight vote, and if you read that page you'll see my evaluation doesn't do a straight vote count, but rather is a points system. If you're desperate, I can do a blow-by-blow. Chris cheese whine 00:07, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- You're the one who came up with numbers. I thought of them as votes. If you don't want to call them votes, fine, call them whatever you want, but yes, the full analysis would be helpful, not just random numbers you're making up. Calling them votes at least has meaning, but if you're just saying "these are some points" then you should explain your system. Otherwise, how can anyone else understand it? Mister.Manticore 00:36, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- Calling them votes is misleading. They are recommendations, to be supported by reasons. Administrators are to disregard blind votes ("Keep ~~~~"), and weigh up the reasons. The means for calculation is shown on the page describing the evaluation, but I have taken the time to summarise the arguments as presented here. It is my personal points system, and I use it to evaluate AfDs others have closed. It is not an official guideline, but a tool based on established procedure, taking into account the fact that one strong argument can defeat a non-point with 50 me-toos. It is not perfect by any means. Chris cheese whine 00:46, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- Honestly, I have no problem if you want to consider my wording changed to "Why are you dismissing the keep opinions entirely" . Heck, since it seems to bother you so badly, I'll go back and edit it myself. If you must, consider it a poor choice of words. However, I do object to your failure to explain your evaluation. It's really just as bad as the concern you're expressing about votes. In fact, I'd say your overwarranted focus on one chosen word is making it worse I didn't put any thought into the word vote, and believe it or not, I know what you're talking about. I am familiar with the idea that AfD is not a vote. However, you came up with points. You didn't explain them. You still haven't. Why not? Mister.Manticore 00:55, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- You may notice these little blue things called "links". Try clicking on them. I have a page outlining my method, and have posted my calculation. Chris cheese whine 01:00, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- Sorry, but your link was obscure. I totally missed it. My apologies. Perhaps if you'd just posted that, instead of concentrating on a single word it would have been easier to see. In any case, I do not find your reasoning on that page persuasive to deletoin, in fact, I find your analysis convincing that you aren't giving the other side a fair shake. For example, you've included arguments like "100% fanboy Cruft" (Which is nothing more than WP:IDONTLIKEIT and "original research, indiscriminate collection of information, excessive coverage of a topic on which we already have a supersufficiency ofarticle" as positive factors. You do know that the claims about original research are false, right? Not to mention indiscriminate collection of information. It's not indiscriminate to cover an integral aspect of a game. As for supersufficiency, there's hardly a huge number of World of Warcraft articles, even if did violate policy to have more than one article on a subject. So, why is that a reasonable argument? And the way you count points against people for one argument, but don't for people with similar positions on the other side? Seems unfair to me. Sorry, but your analysis is just too flawed. Get back to me when you correct it for that kind of bias too. Mister.Manticore 03:30, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- I count points for a show of support for a strong argument. Most of the keep comments were irrelevant to Misplaced Pages policies and guidelines, things such as "this isn't a game guide" (without stating why), "we have articles on X" (irrelevant), and "WoW is a notable game" (does not justify minute detail). They are non-issues, and were not relevant to the debate. Your own argument had some grounding in process, therefore it scored. It didn't appear to have any other support (most people preferring to pursue the non-issues above), hence it didn't get marked up on a lg(n) basis as the two delete arguments did. Nothing unfair about that - the two delete arguments scored more than the keep arguments because they carried more relevance and thus more weight. As for the truth or falsity of the claims of original research, DRv simply does not care - that is AfD's job. DRv exists as a court of appeal, and where articles have been to AfD it merely endorses or overturns the decision reached there based on whether process was followed, and relists articles where new information has come to light. Chris cheese whine 20:10, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- Sorry, but I'm afraid I can't concur with any measuring standard that doesn't bother to consider the truthfulness of an argument, nor one that doesn't weigh against fancruft statements. That bias alone convinces me that you aren't being fair and honest. Mister.Manticore 21:48, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- Also, the article in no way covered the subject in minute detail. It was an overview of the concept within the game, and avoided an excess of details, such as detaining where to gather things, growth in experience rates, and the like. Mister.Manticore 22:42, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- First of all, I realize I'm being hypocritical when I say this, but please try to be civil. I know I'm not the most civil person but I'm trying hard to be, so I'd appreciate it if you remained civil too. Anyway, you said "User:Ryanbomber - argument turns on use of the word "playing" rather than "joining". No score." Am I reading this right when I think you're completely invalidating my argument when I said it should remain for people interested in joining the game? If we deleted everything in the Wiki if people had vague interests in it, then we'd lose basically every sort of pop culture article, including TV shows, books, games (video and non,) etc. Please tell me I'm reading this wrong. -Ryanbomber 02:40, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- You're reading this wrong. For a start, WP:INN. Your argument was nothing more than saying it didn't count as a game guide, because the wording in the relevant policy was "playing". Hence, yes, I am invalidating it for that reason. Misplaced Pages is an encyclopaedia first and foremost. WP does not cater for people "interested in joining World of Warcraft". WP does not provide "interesting" or "useful" information. It provides unbiased, well-known, verifiable information. In my estimation (that bit is important), the point that the information might be useful to those interested in joining the game does not have a grounding in our policies, therefore it carries little weight, regardless of how many people bring it up. Chris cheese whine 20:10, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- Semantics are hard. Alright, replace all times I said "playing" with "playing or learning about the game." Also, WP DOES cater for people "interested in joining World of Warcraft." It caters to ANYONE interested in learning about World of Warcraft. It caters to people interested in learning ANYTHING. It's an Encyclopedia. It provides information. But I guess "useful" isn't important. So the problem is bias (How is an explanation of game mechanics biased? Is it even possible?) the fact that the game is ], and the ] ] ] Where is the problem? -Ryanbomber 00:38, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
- Endorse Closure- Keep Deleted Editors need to recall that DR is properly a place for contesting process, not a second shot at an AfD debate that has already been duly considered. Nothing in the initial AfD was out of process and the closing admin was perfectly right to conclude that consensus was in favour of deletion. Eusebeus 11:39, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- A biased admin who ignores the arguments of the position he or she doesn't like is within process? Mister.Manticore 13:56, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- No, it isn't, but that's not what we have here. What we had here was an admin who quite rightly discounted most of the irrelevant detail, and found what was left was two good arguments to delete which had explicit support, and one weak argument for keeping it which didn't. If the keep arguments were somewhat more substantial, you'd have a case. Chris cheese whine 20:10, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- Hmm, apparently, "but instead if you think the debate was interpreted incorrectly by the closer" is a valid grounds for Deletion Review. That is what I believe. I believe Ryanbomber and Havok concur. If this is the wrong way to deal with that concern, would you suggest a better way? Mister.Manticore 14:04, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- You're welcome to file for a review on those grounds-but you must accept that consensus may go against you. Admins are given some degree of latitude in interpreting an AfD debate, generally their decisions are not overturned unless they are obviously and clearly wrong, biased, or otherwise out of line, or if new evidence that was not known at the time of closing comes to light. I don't see any of those happening here, so I voted to endorse. Seraphimblade 20:19, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- And did you look at the closing admin's own statements on such things? I'm afraid I can't give any latitude to somebody with that attitude. Mister.Manticore 21:48, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- BTW, could you answer my earlier question as to why you think the closer's decision was clearly correct? There was no explanation in it, so all we can say is that he decided to delete. Not why. Did you consider that? Mister.Manticore 21:51, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- Alright, that's a very valid request. Here goes then. Firstly, if we go by the pure counting method (which I never advocate), we've got 9 delete recommendations to 5 keeps-an awfully solid majority in favor of deletion. Both the delete and keep recommendations covered and went back and forth over whether or not it was or was not a game guide and/or unsalvageably OR. Finally, one of the keep arguments was quite weak ("this is too big to fit somewhere else" does not imply "this should be in Misplaced Pages at all"), and many arguments centered around comparing WoW to basketball, chess, and others similar, which is wholly inaccurate-these are old (in one case centuries old) games with literally tens or hundreds of thousands of secondary sources available. If WoW's still getting played a hundred years from now, that comparison might become appropriate. Chess' individual strategies are highly notable because they have been written about. The same for basketball-one can easily reference what a technical foul is or what's the penalty for a double dribble. This is simply not the case with WoW-yet. If it becomes notable enough that people start writing magazines, and books, and newspaper articles, and the like, outside of strategy guides and similar, the article could be written with those sources-but "I played the game and found that..." is original research, information must be verifiable through reliable secondary sources. One of the "keep" arguments states that "the game itself" could be used as a source-this is clearly incorrect and the closer did well to discount it. In sum, many people recommended deletion for many very good reasons, and, while I think the closer could have interpreted it as a keep, it appears the evident consensus was to delete and that discretion was not improperly exercised. Once again, DRV is not a rehash of AfD, it is to analyze two questions-"Was the closer obviously and clearly in error or out of line when (s)he interpreted the debate?" and "Has new evidence not known when the debate was closed come to light, and is there a substantial chance that this evidence would have swayed the outcome?" As far as I can see, the answer to both questions is a "no"-the closer exercised a reasonable and proper amount of discretion, and no new evidence has been presented. And this is true even if we presume that each and every keep argument was a good one-those arguments simply weren't the consensus. Seraphimblade 07:18, 26 November 2006 (UTC)
- If you go to amazon.com there are 80 book results for World of Warcraft. Some of these results will be repeated results and many will not mention professions, so that severly reduces the number of relevant books, but there are still going to be 15-20+ books which mention this information. Many magazines have made articles on WoW generally or specific aspects of it which will include professions information. This is plenty of secondary sources - if we include game guides. If we don't include game guides then you are correct as there are very few or none non-gameguide secondary sources. However I don't see why these can't be included. Also WP:OR says an article can use only primary sources if "(1) only make descriptive claims, the accuracy of which is easily verifiable by any reasonable adult without specialist knowledge, and (2) make no analytic, synthetic, interpretive, explanatory, or evaluative claims". Facts about professions are easily verfyable using primary sources such as the blizzard website and are not claims. WP:OR is there for a reason: "to prevent people with personal theories attempting to use Misplaced Pages to draw attention to their ideas", this article doesn't do that. Now WP:V does say "If an article topic has no reliable, third-party sources, Misplaced Pages should not have an article on it", but the topic does have 3rd party sources, so I don't see a problem unless you can show that game guides don't count as sources. Dragging up Latvian Gambit again all the sources are guides as to how to use it and advice regarding it - game guides. Now these game guides were probably written by experts, but there are people who are experts on WoW, so I don't see the distinction. Raoul 09:36, 26 November 2006 (UTC)
- Well, since you brought up the counting method, then please at least show the decency to factor out ones that say things like "100% pure fanbody cruft" . By my count, there are three that say that, or make no argument at all other than "per someone else". Which means nothing in terms of their own rational thinking. So it'd be down to 6-5, not a majority, and possibly 6-5-1 if you consider the merge vote. Of the delete arguments, at least 3 provided nothing in the way of support for their claims, just bare, unsupported assertions that were disputed at the time. However, treating AfD's as a vote is a bad idea, so let's not, and pretend you never brought it up. Anyway you don't seem to recognize that information about professions in World of Warcraft IS being kept in Misplaced Pages. It's right there in the main article. The question is, is more detail approrpiate than can be fit in the main article? I think so. Article size is still a problem, and that paragraph just isn't expansive enough. Complaining about sources is also mistaken. There are sources about the professions, even the help files of the game itself. I don't know about you, but to me, that IS a good source, and it isn't original research. It's like reading the credits to a movie and seeing who is in it. Do you think that's a problem? I don't. But if you want secondary sources, there are plenty on World of Warcraft. As I already said, Google. This isn't new evidence btw, this is evidence that was clearly ignored by the closing admin, who made no effort whatsoever to represent the discussion, and based on his or her stated prefences, wants to delete Warcraft related articles. And your comments about chess and basketball don't really seem to recognize something. We aren't talking about a single article on chess openings but a category with around 150 entries. How do all of them meet any of the thresholds for inclusion? Have any of them been written about outside of specialist literature? I don't think so. It's not like this article was advising one take up fishing, or blacksmith, or telling folks what to do. Just describing it, in the same way one might describe a chess piece's movement. Does that really constitute a game guide? I can't see how, but if it does, then we've got a lot to get rid of material. I think that's a bad idea. Mister.Manticore 17:50, 26 November 2006 (UTC)
- I am glad you admit an admin could have interpreted the consensus as a keep though, and I ask that you consider whether the admin in question, who has stated that they want to delete Warcraft content, was the proper one to make the decision, without any explanation, whether they were truly capable of giving a fair and honest consideration to the keep arguments at all. I don't think you can honestly say that happened. Mister.Manticore 17:50, 26 November 2006 (UTC)
- Overturn deletion I'm going to try and answer claims that people who voted keep didn't provide arguments to back them up. This could be quite long. I may repeat arguments (and even an example or two) already given (I suppose repeating things not already given would be difficult), but I want to give a list of all the arguments in one place. I may not deal with all arguments perfectly, so if there are any specific points you disagree on then feel free to point them out. It is a bit pieced together so the order may seem a bit strange.
The first reason given for deletion was that the article was a game guide. To quote WP:NOT "Misplaced Pages articles should not include instructions or advice (legal, medical, or otherwise), suggestions, or contain "how-to"s." Facts about professions are not instructions, advice, suggestions or "how-to"s. A game guide is something which guides you about a game, not something which gives you information about it. The definition of "game guide" and "indiscriminate collection of information" are not technicalities, they are the entire policy.
The next reason was that the information is available elsewhere. It is wikipedia policy that all the information posted is available elsewhere - that's what makes it verifyable and stops it being original research. Now wikipedia is not an indiscrimatinate source of information as stated in WP:NOT, but professions information is not indiscrimate as shown by WP:FICT: "Minor characters (and places, concepts, etc.) in a work of fiction should be merged with short descriptions into a "List of characters"." Since WP:FICT applies to all fictions and professions is a concept within the game they should be put together as a list with short descriptions into a separate article (the main WoW article being already too long). So wikipedia policy says that this page should exist.
The article was verifyable and was not OR. The Blizzard website gives all the information as do several books which have been published about WoW. This means we have a primary source and several published secondary sources (as well as thousands of online secondary sources).
So the article is verifyable, isn't OR, is allowed by WP:NOT and is not an indiscriminate collection of information, so there are no real arguments for deletion. WP:FICT says that this article should exist, so there is a real argument to keep. There are still some minor arguments to cover however.
The main article is too long. Therefore all profession information should go in a separate article (if it is included at all, though I'm sure you don't want me mentioning WP:FICT again). This isn't a particularly strong argument, but it is still a minor reason for keep.
"It's fancruft". No it's not - it is verifyable information about a notable (compared to most wikipedia articles anyway) topic.
"Keep proponents didn't even try to explain how this aspect of the game is notable outside the game itself." Most things aren't notable outside of the area they are notable in. The crystal structure of calcium chloride is not relevant to the vast majority of people (that's not even an obscure topic - it's a common chemical), but the information is still on wikipedia. Other examples such as the Latvian Gambit are more relevant: it is completely useless information and is of interest to fewer people than professions in WoW, but it is and should be on wikipedia. Of course chemicals and chess aren't really relevant to this discussion, but policy is - the same policy which makes that information available on wikipedia should make this information available.
"What we had here was an admin who quite rightly discounted most of the irrelevant detail, and found what was left was two good arguments to delete which had explicit support, and one weak argument for keeping it which didn't." The two strong arguments were it is OR (despite it being easy to find primary and secondary sources) and that is is a game guide (because we say so - no evidence necessary). The weak argument was "it is not a game guide because" followed by specific references to the definition of a game guide.
"As for the truth or falsity of the claims of original research, DRv simply does not care - that is AfD's job." So we did the wrong thing before and must therefore do the wrong thing again? Surely it is DRv's job to make sure that the AfD was fair?
I can't remember any other points made so I'll stop now, but I think that shows all the arguments for delete are not supported by wikipedia policy while there is at least one reason for keep.
Just one more thing: I don't realy understand Chris' scoring system. Why does the comment "100% pure fanboy cruft" register a score? It does not give any arguments rooted in policy or any backup for the statement. Also why do "me too"s count at all? There would have been quite a few "me too"s if people hadn't refrained from repeating arguments already given, so it means that arguments are not scored based on quality but on how many people posted the same thing. Repeating an argument should not make it more valid, a lie is a lie however many times it is repeated even if it "becomes the truth" in that most people believe it.
"Your own argument had some grounding in process, therefore it scored. It didn't appear to have any other support (most people preferring to pursue the non-issues above), hence it didn't get marked up on a lg(n) basis as the two delete arguments did." Let me understand this correctly. An argument was posted. It was correct (in my view and that of most other people who think the article is a good idea) therefore nobody bothered to repeat it as it wasn't necessary and it gets less points because of this? Raoul 22:16, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- I concur with you, and thank you for your time. Mister.Manticore 22:42, 25 November 2006 (UTC)
- You have argued this better then I could ever have in my entire life. Thank you. -Ryanbomber 01:59, 26 November 2006 (UTC)
- Thank you very much for that Raoul, sums up everything very nicely. Havok (T/C/e/c) 08:31, 27 November 2006 (UTC)
- I see an excellent argument not about overriding policy but why the policy isn't applicable in the first place. -Ryanbomber 11:26, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
- "Overriding policy" is a policy that overrides a consensus for the opposite result. A keep argument based on overriding policy would be a one that arguing from policy says that keeping is required despite a consensus to delete. The canonical example of an overriding delete argument is a copyright violation - if the article contains text violating copyright in all versions it would need to be deleted no matter how strong the consensus to keep. Arguments that WP:NOT doesn't apply are not overriding policy arguments, they are instead arguments that a particular policy is not relevant, not an argument that the policy applies and requires a specific outcome. GRBerry 14:08, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
- "Minor characters (and places, concepts, etc.) in a work of fiction should be merged with short descriptions into a "List of characters." This list should reside in the article relating to the work itself, unless either becomes long, in which case a separate article for the list is good practice. The list(s) should contain all characters, races, places, etc. from the work of fiction." This is a quote straight from WP:FICT saying that the article should exist (unless you consider WoW to be real or don't think professions in the game are a concept, etc.). There is no space in the main article for a list of professions with short descriptions. Raoul 16:32, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
- WP:FICT is a guideline, not policy, so no argument based on it can be an argument from overriding policy. GRBerry 18:15, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
- I thought the P in "WP" stood for policy, but you are right - it is a guideline. What about Misplaced Pages:Deletion_policy/Minor_characters then? That appears to be a policy to me (even though it doesn't have the box saying "This page is an official policy on the English Misplaced Pages"). Raoul 18:24, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
- The P in WP is from Wikipedia, as WP: is a shortcut to the Misplaced Pages: name space. That page explicitly says it was a discussion page searching for consensus, and that the resulting consensus was memorialized in WP:FICT; it has therefore a lesser status that WP:FICT, which reflects the current status of it. See point 5 of Misplaced Pages:Deletion policy/Minor characters#Conclusion. GRBerry 20:40, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
- The only problem you seem to have with this still is with WP:FICT. I think I should remind you that guidelines are policies with exceptions. They've been agreed on by the majority. They're completely kosher. I don't think anyone's proved that this is an exception, so by guideline it should be undeleted. Also, I did not get a chance to respond to your first reply, about "Overriding Policy." Isn't this exactly what we're arguing (not to put words in anyone's mouth?) Policy/Guidelines were followed incorrectly and the article should be reinstated because of it. We're overriding policy by actually listening to it instead of distorting it. -Ryanbomber 22:27, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
- A guideline, because it allows exceptions, does not override consensus. Consensus is how we measure whether an exception should be made. Consensus for article deletion is measured at AFD, and I see no abuse of discretion by the closer in their evaluation of the consensus. GRBerry 22:44, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
- Touche. The problem with that argument is the fact that WP:FICT was not sourced at all in the AFD, except one person complaining about the lack of a real-world perspective, which seems to have been shot down. Most of the argument was based on WP:NOT, people claiming it was a game guide, and ambiguous calls of "fancruft." Why it shifted all over the place, I have no idea. -Ryanbomber 00:38, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
- Endorse Deletion - Didn't read the overly long semantics tapdancing on this page after the first 5 paragraphs. Looking over the AfD, I fail to see an improper close. I see a article that is clearly important to people who play WoW, but that doesn't mean that they are the best qualified to determine how to interpret policy. Regardless, the closing admin went on actual arguments and thus deletion. --Elaragirl 08:20, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
- Lunacy of not reading arguments and voting anyway aside, how are WoW players NOT best qualified to determine policies? Does playing WoW make someone inferior in some way? Not at all. Playing WoW and interperting policy have nothing to do with eachother. Keep the ad hominems out of this. -Ryanbomber 12:01, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
- Simple. In any debate where a number of people are direct participants in the subject of an article, I tend to distrust their ability to neutrally observe. It's just for this reason that I don't edit the things I'm heavily involved in, like articles on China, Neverwinter Nights, or much of the LGBT movement. I read the entire mess above all the way down to the post by Angus McLellan, and all I got out of it was a sense that people 'felt' it was closed improperly since it wasn't done the way they wanted. The fact remains that there were two deletes, with reasoning, and one keep, with reasoning, and a bunch of pile-ons on both sides without. For clarification, I'm not attacking the WoW players instead of their argument. I'm suggesting that WoW players who want to keep this article are unlikely to look at it in the neutral light (not caring either way) that is likely to see ANY AfD decision resulting in delete as valid. That's all. --Elaragirl 14:01, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
- I would agree with you that anybody wanting to keep an article that didn't follow policy is a fool. The problem is that this article DOES (did?) follow policy. We've said that several times and explained how the policy is worded and why it was misread. This isn't a matter of proof, this is a matter of semantics, which is something that you hinted at loathing. Does that mean you should stay out of this review? -Ryanbomber 16:29, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
- Not to sound uncivil here, but Elaragirl, you are the reason I have come to find Misplaced Pages flawed. Voting and commenting without reading the whole discussion, and basing votes on others without trying to come with your own reasoning. Specially when it comes to AfDs, not talking about you here, but people tend to just follow the flow. If there are 2 delete votes and 0 keep, people are more likely to just vote delete, regardless of subject matter, or even knowing what the article is about, or even reading the article. I find all this a real shame, and my thoughts about the matter really come into fruition in this flawed AfD in my eyes. It's a shame, it really is.. Again, I apologize for any uncivilized remarks, I'm just tired of the whole debacle. Havok (T/C/e/c) 13:04, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
- I could say the very same think, Havok. More often than not, and the point of my post, is that there is some article that clearly violates a policy and should be deleted. Someone nominates it. Some pithy soul throws "Ilikeit!" up as a rationale for keep, and there's a mass of delete and keep votes presaged on one or two policy arguments. The whole thing is then shut down as 'no consensus', the article is not improved, and the whole thing starts again. As for your assertion, as I responded to Ryanbomber, I read a majority (five paragraphical sections, down to the post by Angus McLellan) and came away with nothing that convinced me to keep such an article. I don't care if I'm the reason you find Misplaced Pages flawed. Interjecting that into this debate simply reinforces my opinion that most people voting keep here could care less about the Misplaced Pages's goals or policy and only care that the articles they find useful , interesting or worthy stay. To answer your incivility, I read the Misplaced Pages without joining as an editor since 2003, and people like you have created the attitudes of people like 'me'. Good day. --Elaragirl 14:01, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
- Well, that is the reason I started this review, the fact that the article - at the time of closing - did not break any policies at all. Closer has even stated himself that he hates, what he likes to call "gamecruft", and that he finds articles like this trivial and silly. The article didn't even break WP:NOT when it was nominated because me and several other people cleaned out all the game guide information that broke NOT. Hence the closing of the AfD looked to me as a act of bias, which again, is the reason I asked for a review. But I find our attempt feeble, and as such I do not want to spend any more time with this. I have started an article to try and set a consensus for what would break WP:NOT or not at Misplaced Pages:Game guide. Havok (T/C/e/c) 14:38, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
- Endorse deletion with no prejudice against recreation if it becomes sourced. The most serious issue seems to be sourcing and that may be able to be dealt with. If someone wants me to I'd be happy to userfy a copy for them so they can work on sourcing it. I'd also like to register my concern at the closing. Admins who have strong opinions about not having certain classes of articles should refrain from closing those AfDs unless the AfDs are clear. JoshuaZ 15:09, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
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