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| - Whats the deal with "candidate for deletion" on Nightfall based builds. Theres no warranting a delete, once the game comes out those builds simply need to be updated with the current content. This would be a totally backwards way to approach thinking ahead of the curve. I'd rather see build ideas that were explored already during the FPE event listed, and then simple updated, rather then deleting all the research the community already put into the product. --Amokk 15:44, 22 August 2006 (CDT) as i explained on Talk:D/N Dwayna's Curse, these builds will be useful for four days over four months, and will undoubtedly require updates at every juction. they should not have been created, but i ignored it. when skuld started placing tags on them i realized that they should have had tags on day one, durring the weekend. --Honorable Sarah Image:Honorable Icon.gif 15:50, 22 August 2006 (CDT) I think your missing something in your reasoning. Techniqually you should go and delete every Nightfall skill from guild wiki from my understanding of your statement. If Guild Wiki is ever to properly become oriented with the community, much less the PvP community, it has to keep up with what is happening in said community and the builds that community is designing. If anything Nightfall based builds should be labeled a "Work In Progress" and allowed to stand until final release of the game unless completely vetted out by the community veterans as rubbish before hand.--Amokk 16:09, 22 August 2006 (CDT) i didn't say anything was rubbish, just that it was not useful. those builds might be the best in the universe, but they cannot be used, tested, or improved until release. as you point out, the skills are certainly going to change, and while skill pages can be updated by simply coping the text out of the game, builds have subtle interactions that will, most likely, need extensive evaluation in the very likely event that the skills are changed. evaluation that could be better used on existing [:Category:untested builds|untested builds]. "the community" has no way of testing these builds either, unless you are refering to anet's beta community, who assuredly has offical information that is far superior to ours. --Honorable Sarah Image:Honorable Icon.gif 16:20, 22 August 2006 (CDT) Yes! THANK YOU, Sarah! I've been meaning to throw the delete tag on those ages ago, for the exact same reasons. The point is, those builds are not able to be tested, and cannot stay in the category they are in now. Perhaps they could be moved to [:Category:Archived builds]? — Rapta Image:Rapta Icon1.gif (talk|contribs) 23:32, 22 August 2006 (CDT) Maybe we should have a different category? Something like "Preview event builds" or "Unreleased expansion builds"? (I don't really like either name that much, but you get the idea.) I agree that having them clutter up the other Untested and PvE, HA, AB, RA, etc. builds is undesirable. --Spot 16:30, 22 August 2006 (CDT) you mean something Akin to the unfavored category, where the builds exist only in that category and not in any functional or skill categories? --Honorable Sarah Image:Honorable Icon.gif 16:33, 22 August 2006 (CDT) Pretty much, yes. But not Unfavored though, preferrably a separate category. --Spot 16:48, 22 August 2006 (CDT) i'm not totally opposed to that. i still think the solution is to simply remove the pages and create new builds when nightfall is released, but at least they would be out of the main builds areas. --Honorable Sarah Image:Honorable Icon.gif 16:50, 22 August 2006 (CDT) Something along these lines is exceptable. Out of the way, but still excessable to those working on them or willing to give input...Sounds like a good deal.--Amokk 16:54, 22 August 2006 (CDT) I find it silly that people are posting Nightfall builds now, but for different reasons. Any posted outside the weekend are guaranteed to be untested. I like to create builds and create pages for them only after I've ran considerable testing of my own to deem it viable as a build. I wouldn't mind a separate categorty, but it still doesn't touch the issue that builds posted now are untested, untestable, and very likely to use skills that change upon release. --Thervold 19:11, 22 August 2006 (CDT) True, but it doesn't hurt to leave ideas on the table. A great idea thats posted is availible to test and wok with. If its deleted though that leaves room for completely forgetting the concept that made it work in the first place. The wiki buildspace is a place to post builds for the community. I feel that having valad idea for the community to work with is just as viable. Hell, i Will PERSONALLY test every Dervish build when Nightfall is released to test for inneffectiveness due to changes. (because i unlocked all the availible dervish skills during the event) that way we could keep the concepts and remove them when they are no longer valad at all. Isnt teh unfavored section there for exactly the same reason? To allow room for inspiration? --Midnight08 Image:Assassin-icon-small.png 19:34, 22 August 2006 (CDT) GuildWiki shouldn't be a dumping ground for untested theoretical builds, many of which will be forgotten by the time Nightfall is actually released, and will never be updated. If you have theoretical builds that you want to try out once you can try them, track the build in your user space for now. I see no justification to as actual build articles at this stage. --- Barek (talk • contribs) - 19:49, 22 August 2006 (CDT) Some of these were tested pretty extensively, and until we see changes come through the builds are still valad. No reason to nuke em until we see changes that make them no longer valad builds. Just create a place for them, even if its an archive of sorts. When Nightfall comes i want a few established build ideas to look at. And so far its only the good ol boys who have any problem with this. --Midnight08 Image:Assassin-icon-small.png 23:14, 22 August 2006 (CDT) barek put it as concisely as it can be put. these will surely be forgotten when nightfall comes around. [Category:Untested builds] shouldn't be a dump space. --Honorable Sarah Image:Honorable Icon.gif 00:09, 23 August 2006 (CDT) I am in favor of keeping them (in a separate category without being linked). They might be good builds, so why waste them by deleting. However, once Nightfall arrives, we should be quick to delete them, unless they are proven to still work (preferably by the original submitter). --Xeeron 00:18, 23 August 2006 (CDT) So have the authors keep them in their user space for now. Gets them out of the main article space. If after factions is released they prove to still be viable, then build articles can be built for them. --- Barek (talk • contribs) - 00:38, 23 August 2006 (CDT) I disagree with keeping them in userspace. The reason i want them there is soo that i can see them and use them as an inspiration for ideas. If they were in userspace then i wouldnt be able to find them and neither would the rest of the community. Just give them their own area, its that really so difficult? (Remember we'll be having this debate every 6 months, might as well make a long term solution. If you choose the userspace route now in 6 monhs when a group of new people come through and C4 is released they'll have no clue that the builds will be rejected by the old school leaders here... The'll make a build to help the community and then they'll have to deal with possible deletion of their work. If you create an area for Theoretical or Pre Release builds and open the link to the area when the 1st preview events are announced, and then close the link and wipe the area a month after the games release (make it a tag and it the authors responsibility to re link it to the testing forums). this would stop this issue from ever coming up again and would be a simpler process than arguing over it. Deletion of a persons efforts for really no reason is a fast way to alienate the newcomers... If you want the contributors to keep coming you guys need ta learn that new ideas arent really a bad thing. --Midnight08 Image:Assassin-icon-small.png 06:35, 23 August 2006 (CDT) /2nd; seriously --Amokk 08:41, 23 August 2006 (CDT) Forgive me if I'm wrong, but I think there was some talk about deleting untested builds that have become abandoned unfinished by thier authors. If that's so, why not just apply the same to this? If 1 or 2 months after Nightfall is released no changes or comments have been added on those page, they would be deleted. For now, a note about it being a theoretical build might be enough, though I suppose it would waste space a bit. I'm with the delete-one-month-after-nightfall idea though. Silk Weaker 06:24, 23 August 2006 (CDT) While personally I dont care whether the articles are in Userspace or not, putting the builds in would keep them linked, even if in userspace. --Xeeron 06:43, 23 August 2006 (CDT) Now that idea i like... so could we set some sort of a deadline then and then if a build is not transferred by that deadline I will add it to my userspace for testing on release. i will also keep them all linked through the category above. (wouldnt mind a link to the category listing on the builds page) --Midnight08 Image:Assassin-icon-small.png 08:31, 23 August 2006 (CDT) In Response to Barek and his whole "these are all speculation builds" Text that he removed: note: I had removed this less that 5 minutes after posting as I wanted to wait until I had more time to think on it - but as it was replied to, here is the removed post --- Barek (talk • contribs) - 09:20, 23 August 2006 (CDT) We regularly delete anything that is mere gossip/speculation and not provable as part of the game - untestable builds should fall under that same umbrella. Some of these were developped and tested during the preview event, while others have merely been thought of afterwards as "I wonder how this mix would do" type things. The argument asking if we really want to go through the deletions every six months is irrellevant. We already go through a similar process in the Nightfall campaign article where we delete anything that is unproven speculation - only factual content is kept - a process repeated every six months, it's not a hassle. New ideas are not bad things. Unprovable speculation and theory in the main namespace of a site that prides itself on supplying only factual provable content is the problem. Once nightfall is released, new builds will be getting added very quickly. If these builds had been appropriately tagged for deletion sooner, we wouldn't even be having this debate, the only reason it occurred is because of the volume of build dumping by the time someone noticed. Stand alone databases exist for tracking personal/concept builds - GuildWiki's main space should not be used for that purpose. --- Barek (talk • contribs) - 09:03, 23 August 2006 (CDT) Most of these build WERE tested during the event. I'm sure they will be retested during the next event. They arent speculation. they worked. I will be testing EACH dervish build here during the events... Where is the speculation. The only Speculation here is the assumption that the skills will be changed. Yes, i realize its likely that some will, but they might not be and the last official notice we recieved was the currently used skills which were tested for the builds. --Midnight08 Image:Assassin-icon-small.png 09:11, 23 August 2006 (CDT) The event was July 28 – 30, many of these builds were created in GuildWiki within the last week. At least if a build were added at the time of the event or immediately after, it could be arguable that it was tested during the event. Anything added after that cannot be proven to have been tested - they are theoretical at best. --- Barek (talk • contribs) - 09:30, 23 August 2006 (CDT) Agreed, i am merely stating that any created DURING the event should not be considered for deletion. The ones that are created w/o any testing should be the only ones targeted with this deletion movement. I know i EXTENSIVELY tested my Dwaynas Curse build. I still agree with moving to userspace as long as there is category set and a moderately easy way for users to find the category--Midnight08 Image:Assassin-icon-small.png 09:38, 23 August 2006 (CDT) I have no problem with removing the delete tag and inserting a category tag to any of these builds that were created in GuildWiki during the event or within roughly a week after the event (Aug 6th seems a reasonable cutoff). My primary complaint here has been with the several that have delete tags that were created more recently and that cannot be proven. Those are, due to their late creation date, questionable on if they were even tested during the event. --- Barek (talk • contribs) - 09:45, 23 August 2006 (CDT) Note: A build posted within one week after is the longest that I would support considering a build to have been actually tried during the event. If the community wants to tighten it to be within a day or two, or even only builds posted during the event itself, I have no objection to those closer cutoffs. --- Barek (talk • contribs) - 10:09, 23 August 2006 (CDT) no matter how well tested, the skills will change, meaning they'll need to be re-evaluated and re-tested. if people are going to protest deletion, then let's get these out of main namespace and into an isolated category in user space. --Honorable Sarah Image:Honorable Icon.gif 11:51, 23 August 2006 (CDT) For builds that were tried and posted during the event, I have no problem keeping them in the main namespace - although with their own category and a disclaimer tag (maybe the standard C3 and/or another disclaimer) - it's really no difference to me than a skill having the c3 tag. My primary objection on theoretical builds has been specific to those created after the fact (one was even created yesterday) that may or may not have even been tried during the event. Because their posting date draws into question if they were actually tried (regardless of claims), those should be deleted or required to remain in the user space for now. If in the user space, I have no opinion if the theoretical ones should be linked to the same or maybe a sub-category of those that are in the main space. --- Barek (talk • contribs) - 12:00, 23 August 2006 (CDT) Sarah, you are promoting deletion based on the speculation that the skills will change. Many skills may not change. Even after a change the build may be viable. Should we delete any build who's skills MIGHT change? For that matter if you know for sure a skill is going to change should you just delete it? We knew EoE was going to change, and even after the change i have seen several requests for deletion on EoE builds that still work, Maybe even work Better after the change. We need to stop being so close minded about things around here. I have read several pressing arguments about why the builds should stay. But so far the only argument for deletion is based on the assumption (speculation) that there are upcoming changes to the skills. While that is a possible and likely outcome, it is in no way the ONLY outcome to the situation. --Midnight08 Image:Assassin-icon-small.png 12:29, 23 August 2006 (CDT) arguing BETA skills are not going to be refined between now and release is a hard sell, and it's just as difficult an arguement that builds based on those beta skills are similar to builds based on EoE, which is both stable and testable. --Honorable Sarah Image:Honorable Icon.gif 12:53, 23 August 2006 (CDT) I'm arguing that we have no official word yet so assuming they are goes against the purpose of the wiki to begin with. up to this point the skills listed in such builds are current and the latest information we have recieved. I dont assume anything in my statement, i state that there is speculation stating an issue will exist later. That is truth, no room for argument in truth. I agree that the skills will likely be changed i just dont think that it makes any sense to delete until after the speculated changes take place. The changes are speculation, the skills in place now are currently fact, until changes are made and shown to the community. --Midnight08 Image:Assassin-icon-small.png 12:58, 23 August 2006 (CDT) the skills are not current, that was the point of my last argument. they were current as of the event, nearly two months go, but they are not testable, and we have no idea how much they are going to change. mapping uncertain ground by documenting the skills is one thing, constructing a town with these builds, quite another. --Honorable Sarah Image:Honorable Icon.gif 14:18, 23 August 2006 (CDT) Personally I believe that builds for Nightfall should not be published until Nightfall is released, regardless of any preview events. <LordBiro>/<Talk> 14:29, 23 August 2006 (CDT) Forget it, im not bothering to contribute to this place anymore and i hope others follow... actually i dont have to hope that the community who runs this place will ensure that over time... Do you all not realize that a vote in an area like this is biased by nature? The regulars are the ones opposed to nightfall builds. They know they have more support because they have been acquaintances for a while here already. On the other hand those of us who are just here to give a little with the free time they have are ignored. Yes theer are less of us, we would not win a vote. I asked for comprimises, instead of a comprimise the elitist community behind this looks for the easiest way to get their way... I'm done, you all are not worth my time... I'll let gw.gamependium.com store my ideas, at least they dont let their ego's get ahead there. Adios, i loggin out and wont be loggin back in. I think GWO Wiki will have any further suppot i may want to give. Sux too as i was also contributing to Neverwiki. --Midnight08 Image:Assassin-icon-small.png 15:19, 23 August 2006 (CDT) Sadly I've reflected the same sentiments as you, Midnight, as a “new contributor”, but if you leave, you'll most assuredly be damning the ‘elitist community’ that exists here to continue to degrade. I’ve used Guildwiki since Guild Wars was released and know first hand that most of the Guild Wars community I interact with daily, absolutely refuses to use Guildwiki for anything more then facts about the game. If you want to know what a spell does or where monsters are or about a mission, that’s about all they rely on Guildwiki for. If the Community wishes to add content, let it be added. The fact this is even up for debate is rediculous and doesn't bode well for disproving the infamous reputation this site has among the real Guild War's Community.--Amokk 15:53, 23 August 2006 (CDT) elitist is an interesting word. my first contrib was 01:43 CDT, 15 March 2006, far from an old hand. no one ever told me i was not welcome, no one ever acted like they were better then i was. some five months later, i have 2500+ edits and, judging by midnights comments, i'm considered a force in the community. not really elitist beheviour. on the other hand, i have never flamed out over a vote or resorted to personal attacks, and i don't feel my contributions should be afforded special protection. i've submitted builds that are deleted or unfavored, articles that were gutted and rewritten, and i have not fought those changes. on the subject of usefulness, you sugguest that your community only checks guildwiki when the need information on a skill, mission or monster, and they don't use it for anything else. i'd consider that a success, considering that once you exclude skills, missions and monsters, there isn't much left of Guild Wars. i'd ask what you think we're missing? [:Category:Tested builds|build advice]? ? ? a Wiki is not a forum, and structured content can only be structured with the exclusion on unstructured content. --Honorable Sarah Image:Honorable Icon.gif 16:15, 23 August 2006 (CDT) Deleting the C3 build pages while keeping the C3 skills is, IMO, hypocrisy. The reasons cited above against any Dervish build are equally applicable against all Dervish skills, so should those be deleted as well? Plus, even though they will likely change in the final game release, editing an existing article to reflect said changes would be much easier than creating one from scratch again. Why are people so afraid of these builds anyway, they don't take much storage space, they don't use bandwidth unless someone actually want to read them, and it's not as if people will make chars according to the builds and then find out they don't work--so what's the problem of stashing them somewhere until they can be properly tested? - 72.195.132.41 16:37, 23 August 2006 (CDT) Still cant see what the problem with leaving builds that were tested is? Because it cant be tested at the moment? When the next event comes wouldnt it be nice for people to have some ideas to work with... not everyoe has teh patiance to sit and construct a build over a period of 6 hours like i do. I love making builds and even if you delete them i will be fine. But damnit the community (not the Elites, im talking about the noobs) could use a place to get ideas. Elitest - think about it some. The Mod and high end user here seems to band together on issues here. At the least they will draw people who see eye to eye into a discussion. I cannot say the same for a low end user who rarely contributes. They u0sually dont who who to contact or how to fight for an issue they believe in. All they can hope to do is explain their side and hope others see the same. Personally i will never agree with people who look at something that might be useful and say i cant guarantee its userful get rid of it. The more that is availible that is of good quality for the community the better. I have seen alot of people her look at a good build and say... hmm it doesnt have xyz i dont like it. then they vote unfavored often after explaining they never tested the build. The worst part is watching the same people follow this and do the same. They often dont offer criticism, they just shoot down the idea. Peopl need to learn to treat a community as a whole with respect, and to work together more. I'm the gass is 1/2 full type, i like content, i like all the info i can get. I so far have not had any issue with the way devs run any game ive played with the exception of the extensive CoH nerfs... The high end user here seems (with some exception) to lean towards th glass is 1/2 empty pov. They want perfection. The Optional Slot discussion is one example of this. It makes no sense. Optional is a real word, its there for a reason. The same goes for alot of things here. The Extreme perfectionists here help build the wiki to the high standars it has, yes. But at the same time perfection can be suffocating. I have been scolded for missing a signature on 1 of my comments.... out of the maybe 30 i had done that day. I have watched people flame a build because of 1 optional slot. And now i am watching sadly as the work of about a dozen people is being trashed because a few of the high end users are saying "whats the point". The point i Inspiration for the next event, the point is to have things to mull over so we can brainstorm the next gamebreaking build. The point, is to have a place thats not a generic forum, where people can go to get all of the info they need without having to randomly dig. The Documentation for MMo's is horrid and the strat guides are pathetic. The wiki's are the best source of info for a community, ad you perfectionists are doing a great job of making it difficult for us newer users to provide that information to the community. -- Midnight [/rant] I think the biggest problem here is that we're dealing with subjective pages on a wiki that tries to remain objective. The idea of being an online encyclopedia for all that is Guild Wars comes into direct conflict with almost the entire Builds category. However, the builds include great references for popular builds and terms seen in game. When I started seeing calls for "BP Rangers" and didn't know what that was, I could search here for that and find examples. However, the subjectivity increases as people post builds that have never been tested. While this isn't always a bad thing, it generates a lot of work for others to sift through to actually test to post their experiences with the build. For me, I like to play at least two or three hours with a build before making a decision, and I appreciate when the poster has taken some time to verify if the ideas the build is based off really work. It is quite possible that a particular build that was never play tested has some good ideas, and as a result, I've shifted my opinion to at least keep the builds. But it would be helpful to remind those looking at them that the ideas are theoretical, marking them as very subjective ideas in an predominatly objective wiki. Thinking about it, I don't mind keeping them where they are with the ch3 tag as that reminder, but moving them to another category would work too. I would appreciate authors who never tested the build ideas (ch3 or otherwise) to say so in the build's talk pages, but that's probably asking too much and unenforcable. --Thervold 17:53, 23 August 2006 (CDT)
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