Wikipedia:WikiProject Final Fantasy/Manual of style
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The following is a subpage of WikiProject Final Fantasy. |
- The following is a style guide for Final Fantasy related articles. For general article guidelines, see Manual of Style.
The following is a style guide for editors who contribute to Final Fantasy-related articles and identify themselves as part of WikiProject Final Fantasy. Please remember, this is simply a guide, and may change depending on Wikipolicy or participant concensus.
Participants may quote this style guide by using the numerical system in effect (eg. 3.1.7)
- Please consult the style guide's talk page before making any changes below, and develop a good participant consensus.
Contents |
[edit] Article naming
Please refer to the official style guide for article naming.
[edit] General
- If possible, make the title the subject of the first sentence of the article (as opposed to putting it in the predicate). In any case, the title should appear as early as possible in the article — preferably in the first sentence.
- The first time the title is mentioned in the article, put it in bold using three apostrophes. Here's an example:
'''article title'''
produces article title. Do not put links in the title. - Do not capitalize second and subsequent words unless the title is a proper noun (such as a name) or is otherwise almost always capitalized (for example: Cloud Strife, but Buster sword).
- In general only create page titles that are in the singular (Key item not Key items).
- Except in titles of works or in official names, avoid the definite ("the") and indefinite ("a"/"an") articles at the beginning of a page name. This applies even if the subject of the page is usually preceded by the definite article "the" in speech or writing: Thus, for example, City of the Ancients is preferred over The City of the Ancients.
- If names are common (eg. Lulu) we must apply a tag in parathesis. Tag the article name with the title the subject is originally related to, or where he/she first featured (eg. Lulu (Final Fantasy X)), or, if the subject appears across titles, use (Final Fantasy) (eg. Cid (Final Fantasy))
[edit] Character profiles
- Each character profile page uses a template specific to the title the character appears in. For a full list of titles, see WPFF Templates.
[edit] Lists
- A list article's title should be descriptive of the article's content.
- Lists should be named "List of...". (eg. List of Final Fantasy titles)
- Lists can also be titles simply "Final Fantasy..." if they are less of a list of information, but more like a collection of sectioned articles. (eg. Final Fantasy airships or Final Fantasy bestiary)
[edit] Article introduction
- In every article there should be a leading paragraph where gives a brief description of what the subject of the article is, or what the article is about, before elaborating.
- The first mention of the subject of the article should be in bold, and italicized thereafter.
- The first sentence should include the subject of the article and describe what the article is in a bare-bones way so a user can easily understand whether they have found the right article or not.
- The first paragraph does not include any spoilers.
[edit] General rules
- Always consider notability (general importance) of a piece of information before adding it to an article. As a general-purpose encyclopedia, Wikipedia is not the ideal place to include any possible information that could be considered useful. Consider using the Final Fantasy wiki on Wikicities for indepth information.
- Always italicise any Final Fantasy title mentioned in the game, or the name Final Fantasy itself.
- Album titles should placed in italics.
- Song titles should be placed in "double quotes".
- Character names, production staff or other names should not be italicised unless used to highlight them.
- A wikilink only needs to appear in the article once - at the first mention. (eg. if Cloud Strife is linked early on, it does not need to be linked anywhere else in the article)
- In general, abbreviations or other shorthand should be avoided
- When referring to Final Fantasy V, spell out the full title of the game, and do not abbreviate it as FFV or FF5.
- PS2 should be PlayStation 2.
- The same goes for role-playing game abbriviated to RPG. Even though most editors will likely understand what you mean, Wikipedia is a general interest encyclopedia, and the casual user may not be familiar enough with gaming terminology to make sense of what many of us take for granted.
- Games in the Final Fantasy series are numbered using Roman numerals, not Arabic numerals. In other words, you should refer to Final Fantasy IX, not Final Fantasy 9.
- Articles should be categorized in the correct subcategory of Category:Final Fantasy. Remember, categories are inherited: an article placed in Category:Final Fantasy X characters does not also need to be placed in Category:Final Fantasy X.
- When you upload a Final Fantasy image or music sample, you should place it in Category:Final Fantasy media.
- Spoiler warnings will not be used in sections under story headings, such as "characters" and "plot".
[edit] Specific article types
[edit] Game articles
- All game articles are named Final Fantasy ??, where ?? is the numeral of the game in question (usually the capitalised Roman numeral, eg, Final Fantasy VIII)
- The introduction paragraph(s) include the name of the title, bold and italicized, and a declaration that it is made by Square Enix, Square Co., Ltd., etc, depending upon the nature of the company at the time of release
(eg: Final Fantasy VII is a computer role-playing game released by Square Co., Ltd. in 1997.)- This is followed by concise general interest information such as the game's sales reception, innovative features and cultural references, if they can be identified (all of these can be expanded upon later in the article).
- The following is a general subsection skeleton for gaming articles, with optional subheadings.
-
- Gameplay
- Story
-
- Setting
- Characters
- Plot
- Development
- Audio
- Reception
- References and/or External links
- Articles conclude with two navigational aid templates and a list of categories.
- The first navigation aid is the title template, named after the shortform of the game title (eg, {{FFVII}} or {{FFX}}).
- The second is series template, {{Final Fantasy series}}.
- Finally, categorise the article appropriately, primarily listing categories for the title itself, the computer and video games category of the year of release, and the category(ies) of the platform(s) on which the title has been released.
[edit] Character list articles
- Articles are named List of Final Fantasy ? characters, where ? is the Roman numeral of the game being described.
- Add the character list template ({{Final Fantasy characters}}) at the top of the page, it will auto-format.
- Split the article into three sections:
- Main playable characters
- Other major characters
- Minor characters
- Playable characters should have an image and a suitable summary. Image alignment may vary according to the requirements of the page. If the summary of relevant, encyclopedic information grows too large, the character may be split to its own article (in which case direct the reader to the main page using the {{main|character_name}} template, placed at the start of the character's summary).
- Other major characters mainly consist of a just a suitable summary. If the character is a primary antagonist or otherwise particularly important an image may be added. It is generally unlikely that other major characters would require a separate article.
- Minor characters are listed with a short summary and invariably require neither images nor separate articles.
- Character lists need not be exhaustive, particularly in the latter two sections.
- For every character section, list the character's name in bold lettering the first time it appears in the article.
[edit] Location list articles
- Articles are named List of Final Fantasy ? locations, where ? is the Roman numeral of the game being described.
- Add the location list template ({{Final Fantasy locations}}) at the top of the page, it will auto-format.
- An image of the game's world map should appear after the introductory paragraph(s). It may aid formatting to left-align the table of contents (using {{TOCleft}}) and centre-align the map image.
- When creating a new entry, bold the first mention of the term as you would with a regular article.
- If possible, split the article into sections based on geographical continents, or major landmasses. If all landmasses have names, use them, otherwise name them after their relative location on the world map. Include a final Other section for miscellaneous locations. For example, the list of Final Fantasy VII locations can be sectioned as follows:
- Eastern continent
- Western continent
- Northern continent
- Other
[edit] Wikipedia is an encyclopaedia
Therefore, articles should be encyclopaedic.
- When referring to the player of a game, use the player instead of you. A person may read the article with no intention of ever playing the game in his life.
- Wikipedia is not GameFAQs:
- For example, Vincent Valentine should not include his stat levels, his weapon guide or how he is obtained as a character out of encyclopaedic terms.
- For example, we should not include how to achieve Barret as a date at Gold Saucer.
- Articles should not be a collection of quotes, cheats, or external links.
[edit] Fair use rationale
This is intended as a quick and simple guide to upholding the claims of fair use of media in our project articles. Please correct any errors and omissions, and update to reflect current wikipedia policy.
[edit] Images
- If slightly modified (cropping, brightness adjustment) but still not damaging the original art, fair use may still be claimed.
- You can't change seriously a copyrighted image without the author's permission and then, again, you have rights only on the modifications themselves, not on the image as a whole.
- No more than 5 fair use illustrations or photographs from the same artist can be used in a work.
- For published collective works (a game like Final Fantasy is a collective work, not just one person's own) no more than 10% or 15 images from the original whichever is least (15 images in our case).
- They must be low resolution (image size) and at 72 pixels/inch, to be certain that someone could not use them as piracy.
- For example, an image exactly the same resolution as, say, an original movie poster could easily be used for piracy .
- Most images must be accompanied by a commentary:
- Cover art - Cover art from various items, for identification and critical commentary (not for identification without critical commentary).
- Team and corporate logos - for identification. See Wikipedia:Logos
- Other promotional material - such as posters, programs, billboards, ads, for critical commentary.
- Film and television stills - for critical commentary and discussion of cinematic and televisual history.
- Screen shots from software products - for critical commentary.
- Paintings and other works of visual art - for critical commentary, including images illustrative of a particular technique or school.
- Publicity photos - for identification. See Wikipedia:Publicity photos
[edit] Audio
- Audio samples should be at most 30 seconds or 10% of the original, whichever is least.
- For an album, the same rule applies and 30 seconds should not be exceeded for the whole album.
- The sample should preserve the same value as the original, not adding your own material or modyfing it in a way that its not recognizable.
- A sample should not contain the heart of the work, such as a famous guitar solo in a song.
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