Welcome!

I try to be friendly and welcoming and I very much appreciate it when others do the same. Please carry out disagreements with respect and civility so we all feel motivated to stick around.

I edit Wikipedia primarily because I enjoy the topics I write about and want to make the articles reflect that. Hand in hand with that goal, I'm learning every time I edit an article. Editing encourages me to dig deeper into topics I find interesting - doing research and digging up historic facts.

I identify strongly with inclusionism and structuralism.

I'm a hardcore video gamer and mostly edit articles related to gaming. I'm interested in game consoles and game companies. I particular like Zelda, Sony, and Nintendo-related topics. The history sections are often lacking and I think adding some historic context brings a lot to the encyclopedia. I'm also passionate about organization - and this applies to any other article. I rearrange articles around more logical lines so the content flows better and is more clearly guided. This reduces redundancies.

I've also noticed that some articles about consoles are far too long and/or detailed, so I tend to spin off different sections into their own articles. It's a delicate balancing act to maintain the right information in the original article while making the new article focused and self-sufficient. Further, I think that in general there are opportunities for new articles to be created about specific topics - for example, the history of a console or a fictional character. Although having seen as many emulator articles as I have, I'm hesitant to endorse such a principle too thoroughly or universally. There are many times for moderation.

I appreciate any help and cooperation from other editors.

Interests Wiki philosophies Editing tendencies
  • Reorganizing sections
  • Breaking out large articles into a number of smaller ones
  • Creating redirects for every possible variation on a name
  • Massively expanding articles
  • Saving articles from the wrecking ball / banhammer / grim reaper / idiom of your choice
  • Going all out with categories, and especially diffusion
  • Creating series of userboxes for things I like
  • Requesting permissions using Commons:Commons:Flickr files/Appeal for license change

On my business card, I am a corporate president. In my mind, I am a game developer. But in my heart, I am a gamer.

— Satoru Iwata, GDC 2005 (thanks DarkToonLink)

About me

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I'm drawn to sarcasm and satire:

Irony and hypocrisy:

And pointing out irony and hypocrisy where it exists:

Compromise is sweet:

WikiHumor

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Thoughts on Wikipedia

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  • You know you're a Wikpedian when you look for an edit summary when you modify a review on Amazon.com.
  • I explain some of my views on Wikipedia policy
  • I compare between Wikipedia and representative democracy
  • I expand on why I value Wikipedia policy
  • I'm internally conflicted over open-ended free-spiritedness and hardcore policy discipline -- I did say the following, and I found the analogy to be apt: "But a certain justification for the bureaucracy is that it forces us to hold controversial decisions up to light of scrutiny, tossing ideas back and forth and testing our views by fire until we forge a steely and battle-tested compromise." But need we subject ourselves to such torment? We're not gladiators here. We're writing an encyclopedia. Besides, the gladiator references are a bit patriarchal.
  • Furthermore, sometimes established editors seem to adhere to existing policy all too easily and with all too little thought into whether or not it should stay that way. Love of the status quo.

What Wikipedia has taught me

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  • Copyright licensing terms, especially fair use (from image uploading)
  • The politics / bureaucracy of a large organization (from all task forces, projects, processes, hurdles, etc.)
  • Tons about various video game-related topics (from reading articles)
  • Copyediting and making sentences flow well (from cleaning up really bad prose to make it acceptable; from cleaning up acceptable prose to make it good; from cleaning up good prose to make it great -- there's something to be learned at each level)
  • Research methods (namely using ProQuest and related tools to find historical new sources)

Interesting finds

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Perhaps my first edit

Interesting essay on problems with Wikipedia

Former contributors survey findings

Interesting thoughts, especially the quotes, on this user page

I like what God of War II did for its structure -- synopsis (catch-all for fictional elements), release section (including sales!!), reception section (does not include sales). I guess the fundamental question is.. does reception include sales? A little of both. Also does a nice job of formatting release date in infobox.