Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Something Awful Forums
== Discussion ==
- Alert: Both [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/wiki.phtml?title=Special:Contributions&target=Irrsinn Irrsinn] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/wiki.phtml?title=Special:Contributions&target=MrVacBob Mr VacBob] are very clearly sockpuppets, user accounts created solely to vote here. I ask: is this the product of an "intellectual" forum, so desperate that they are creating new accounts on Wikipedia to votespam here?--Etaonish 18:22, Oct 13, 2004 (UTC)
- Note: MrVacBob's account was started on 22 Aug 2004, well before this vote began. There are 9 out of 15 total contributions that are unrelated to this vote, 7 of which were made (all to SA or SAF) before the vote began. Despite having a "red" name, Jonathan Drain's account was started well before this vote began, 8 Sep 2004. He has a total of 25 out of 39 edits unrelated to this vote, 17 of which were made before this vote began. func(talk) 04:44, 15 Oct 2004 (UTC)
- Such appeals do not help your case, Etaonish. --Golbez 18:52, Oct 13, 2004 (UTC)
- So your response is that I'm a gimmick account of someone else? Perhaps you should use Google. I'm certainly not going to actively bother to disprove that, since I doubt anyone else believes the claim. --Mr VacBob
- Do some basic research before making such outrageous claims. Google would be a good start. Ashibaka ✎ 23:08, 13 Oct 2004 (UTC)
- I can voice for MrVacBob's legitimacy; I've known him on IRC for quite a while now.--Jonathan Drain 23:11, 13 Oct 2004 (UTC)
- I apologize for using an inappropriate word. What I meant was that the account was almost certainly created because of this controversy hence ought not to be given much weight. That is standard wiki policy: see the 100-edit rule.--Etaonish 00:04, Oct 14, 2004 (UTC)
- Yes infact I did sign up after I read this article and noticed it was up for deletion. I had no reason to sign up before. I don't write articles on wikis in my second language. Also I'm not a member at somethingawful, i wouldn't pay for that. --irrsinn 19:20, Oct 14, 2004 (GMT)
- Rewrite into : the article is also blatantly inserting dubious claims: like the section on 'ZOMG', which says "Rick (real name Matthew Milan) and hannibal (2nd. Lt. James "Turbo" Curbo) are its creators; others who claim to have coined it are lying.)". Do you really think that were it not for SA, no one would be using that phrase? It's been independently invented many times over before and after SA. This article has to be cut down to a reasonable level, if not simply deleted completely.--Etaonish 18:22, Oct 13, 2004 (UTC)
- Yeah, because "ZOMG" is a common typo. 24.91.125.90 23:14, 13 Oct 2004 (UTC)
- Yeah, because no one could have ever thought of something like "ZOMG". It's not very difficult to think of something like that. I used it very early on in my internet career in instant messaging with no outside influence.--Etaonish 00:04, Oct 14, 2004 (UTC)
- I will agree that a four-letter Internet word is not very important to the dictionary, but [http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=en&lr=lang_en&newwindow=1&c2coff=1&safe=off&selm=x580a.646%243m7.214242446%40news.nnrp.ca this post] is the first occurance of the word on Usenet, and is being used by one of the aforementioned people. It may be an accurate claim. (edit: there is a single use in 1999, but it only begins to be used more frequently after the linked post) -- Mr VacBob
- I can't tell if 24.91.125.90 is being serious or not here, but I challenge anyone who says that ZOMG existed prior to Curbo and Milan's creation of it in January 2003, to bring forth evidence. The Something Awful Forums can be surprisingly effective as a means of spreading memes, especially with its links to 4chan. I will, however, concede that the "others who claim to have coined it are lying" is a poor way of phrasing it. (Edit: I just found a 1999 usenet post which said ZOMG. I still hold that Curbo and Milan coined and popularized the phrase in spite of its earlier use.) --Jonathan Drain 23:36, 13 Oct 2004 (UTC)
- Clarification So I'm Matthew Milan, and I did coin (or conversely, re-coin) ZOMG with James Curbo in January 2003. It wasn't really an SA thing initially - James and I were both mods/ops in a DC hub called 'Raspberry Heaven', which was a very peripheral spin-off of SA. James and I (along with other members of the hub) started using the 'word' to mock script kiddies and the like. I was posting a lot in alt-raptors at the time, and it got used a lot in there as well by myself as the poor Raps went belly up that year. Eventually it leaked out of the DC Hub into SA, where it spread into infamy. For a while, I personally tried to promote its use to see how widespread it could become, but that was ages ago. I'm sure people used ZOMG before we did. I'm sure people will use it in the future. It's a stupid joke/experiment that stopped holding interest for me ages ago. I will not miss it when it is gone. I am however, rather annoyed by Etaonish, who seems to be a complete fuckwad. Dear Sir: Please shove your self-serving rhetoric up your own ass, you pretentious twatburger. Also, I can sell you zomg.com for a dollar if it stops your from whining. --Matthew Milan
- Comment: What irks me tremendously (though I assure you it has nothing to do with why I nominated SA forums) is that the exact same controversy erupted over the GameFAQs articles, and some of the users currently wanting to keep SA voted against keeping GameFAQs (this is a vague vague recollection, no formal accusation). GameFAQs was split; its board histories were then put up on VfD, upon which they remerged it with GameFAQs, and it was later completely chopped out of the article. The primary reason no one protested was that there was a dearth of GameFAQs users on Wiki at the time. But SA forums has a large base of SA goons on Wikipedia that will inevitably support its own article.
The SA Forums article is unencyclopedic for the same reasons a vanity page on myself is unencyclopedic: no one really cares about FYAD 2.0, a forum that lasted all of one day. This is obscurity painted as something that actually matters to Wikipedia. I have no vendetta against SA; rather, the SA goons have a vendetta against anyone remotely anti-SA.
Back to Golbez's point. SA was split, but that doesn't mean the material in the child articles was good. The material in SA forums is *inherently* unneeded and should have never led to the split of the original SA article in the first place. Golbez presumes that the material that ballooned the original SA article was needed, when in fact it should have led to it being removed rather than splitting the article in two.
SA then argues that the main reason it belongs on Wiki rather than GameFAQs is because they are more "intellectual", they somehow are "better" than a bunch of "12-year-olds". I claim that using that argument in and of itself disproves their theory, but the real point is that you should only measure importance by objective factors. Objectively, SA is less important than GameFAQs due to its much lower Alexa rating and the fact that it has a tenth of its posts.
- With respect, Etaonish, the Something Awful Forums requires payment to sign up (albeit a nominal amount) which dissuades casual posters and children from signing up, while dissuading users from making an ass of themselves since their membership is actually worth something. The average SA "goon" is between young adult and college age, while the GameFAQs forums appeals to fans of even childrens' video games. I give the example that GameFAQs members routinely vote Final Fantasy VII and its characters as the best in the site's online polls. This doesn't mean there aren't both intellectuals and childish members on each forum, mainly that the average Something Awful Forums-goer is older, mentally older and smarter than the average GameFAQs forumgoer. I dare say that quantity is not better than quality when it comes to content; you need only view Something Awful's consistently humorous "Photoshop Phriday" and "Comedy Goldmine" articles to judge the calibre of many of their members. --Jonathan Drain 23:58, 13 Oct 2004 (UTC)
- Actually, if you take a look at the boards, it is usually FFVII that is criticized and decried as undeserving. What simply happens is that general people who visit the site tend to be younger and vote for FFVII, but they are irrepresentative of the boards theselves. In addition, GameFAQs is the site of much intellectual discussion, and I personally find it much better than what I have seen of SA.--Etaonish 00:04, Oct 14, 2004 (UTC)
- Ah, then you're a user of the GameFAQs forums. In any case, I believe that the Something Awful Forums has actually overtaken its parent webpage in terms of fame and notoriety. As such, when I think of SA I think of the boards before the webpage; when I think of GameFAQs, the reverse is true, as I visit it most often to find game faqs.
- ^^Jonathan Drain well, the point was, we're comparing the two board articles. The same thing happened to both.--Etaonish 00:22, Oct 14, 2004 (UTC)
- That's a generalization, both forums are different. Do you mean to say that both expanded beyond their parent articles? I see where you're coming from here, but the Something Awful forums is more than simply a forum linked to another website - it's an online community. The people there aren't just forumgoers, they're goons; they have their own subculture and camaraderie. The forums are more important than the page, not the other way around - despite the GameFAQs forums being more popular numerically (3,000 goons online right now versus ~5,500 GameFAQs forumgoers). In addition, I would find it difficult to consider Etaonish unbiased in this matter, since he's a GameFAQs member himself.--Jonathan Drain 00:48, 14 Oct 2004 (UTC)
- Interestingly, the same logic applies to GameFAQs. The boards are now almost totally separate from the FAQs. Please don't assume things about things you don't know much about. And I can be perfectly NPOV even though I'm a GameFAQer. See my other post. --Etaonish 01:42, Oct 14, 2004 (UTC)
- Incidentally, I'm a member of both forums, so like, what does that say about me? --Golbez 01:11, Oct 14, 2004 (UTC)
- It means you're a twelve year old goon ;) Seriously though, what I mean to say is that from previous edits, it's clear that Etaonish has a bias against the Something Awful Forums. He's obviously not pleased that GameFAQs forums lost its own writeup, and, holding his own GameFAQs forums in higher esteem than the Something Awful Forums, (he rates their entry as highly as vanity writeups on non-famous individuals) requests the same fate for their writeup. --Jonathan Drain 01:27, 14 Oct 2004 (UTC)
- I should also add that it's clear that the SA members who refer to the GameFAQs forums as "a bunch of twelve year olds" have clearly soured the reputation of their forums in Etaonish's eyes, who, as a GameFAQs forumgoer, would clearly take such a statement personally. --00:52, 14 Oct 2004 (UTC)
- Correction: it means that I was a newb at the time of the GameFAQs deletion, and I have since realized and fought against people who repeatedly add random board history to the article. I voted for a controversial deletion of a LUEshi article, the main fad on the board that is just as notable as tl:dr. Now I extend the policy to SA. I assure you I have no bias against SA, in fact, I used to share an account with a person there before dropping it. You are mistaken if you feel that my being a GameFAQer has anything to do with it. (By the way, you were right, saying "a bunch of 12 year olds" does piss me off, but I know better than to seek Internet grudges.)--Etaonish 01:42, Oct 14, 2004 (UTC)
In short, either all of these forum articles ARE encyclopedic, upon which any remotely popular internet forum deserves a Wikipedia article devoted to its history and traditions and fads, or all of these forum articles are NOT encyclopedic, upon which the SA forums deserve no more than a mention and some objective material about when it was created, etc.
(posted on Siroxo's talk page)
--Etaonish 21:08, Oct 13, 2004 (UTC)
No, it's not an all or nothing proposition. Each decision is made on a case by case basis. This is precisely why we have a discussion forum here at VfD instead of merely a deletion checklist. All forums should not be included or excluded, just like we don't include or exclude all books, people, institutions, TV shows, etc.
I also don't think the relative Alexa ranking of SA vs. GameFAQs is relevant. Of course we should take it into account, and SA's ranking is rather high I understand. But notability is not just ratings or rankings. SA has an influence and noteriety far beyond its rankings, one which I don't believe GameFAQs has despite its higher traffic. (SA's part in the propigation of the All Your Base meme, for example.) I would compare SA to television shows like Twin Peaks, Buffy, or the original Star Trek, much discussed shows which are far more notable than shows which far outstriped their ratings, crap like One Tree Hill or Charmed which are far less notable and will be quickly forgotten. Gamaliel 06:08, 14 Oct 2004 (UTC)
- Actually, it's relevant because there is really no other way to objectively measure influence. Sites higher up on Alexa are more important. Obviously trivial differences are irrelevant, but when there is such a huge gap (4608 vs 791, and keep in mind this is people who visit ANY part of the site of SA), it clearly shows that the more popular site is more influential. (BTW, according to the official AYB history, it wasn't SA, but rather Overclocked that was mainly responsible http://www.planettribes.com/allyourbase/story.shtml#hist --Etaonish 16:46, Oct 14, 2004 (UTC)
- Numerical popularity is the only thing measured in pagehits, not relevance or influence. However, even so, we should take the Alexa figures in context. Gamefaqs shares Alexa count (#791) with its own boards, likewise, SA shares Alexa count (#4,608) with its own boards. Gamefaqs has a huge number of pages, being a website about pretty much every single game and game system ever, with at perhaps thirty or more FAQs on any popular recent game. Conversely, Something Awful's main page is updated only once daily at best, and its forums are paid registration only, limiting the number of pages and visitors it appears to have. I'm not disputing the popularity of the GameFAQs forums, I'm merely saying that it's not quite the subculture that makes the Something Awful Forums an internet phenomenon in itself. --Jonathan Drain 22:03, 14 Oct 2004 (UTC)
- This is a more accurate history: http://frogstar.com/aybabtu/aa-history.asp -- Mr VacBob
- Keep. The Something Awful Forums are a part of a lot of humor on the internet, with many internet meme's, catchprhases and other known nuances originating from those forums. To delete information that explains how these rather large forums operate wouldn't be in the best intrests of information preservation.
- Keep and do not trim. This is one of the most popular forums on the internet, and worth every word. If you don't like it that this article is longer than others on wikipedia, then add to those articles; don't take stuff away! I really don't think that it's bad that this article is 60k long, as 60kb is not that much when one looks at the immensity of wikpedia. And being able to extensively cover an internet forum shows how wikipedia can do stuff a paper encyclopedia could never get close to.-PlasmaDragon 15:22, 15 Oct 2004 (UTC)
==Terrapin==
You are NOT to unilaterally and pre-emptively perform a merge-redirect (Or rather, in your case, a simple redirect) on this article until AT LEAST the five-day VfD discussion period is over. My clock shows four days. Furthermore, no consensus has been made at all, and any such discussion will then belong on the talk pages. --Golbez 02:03, Oct 17, 2004 (UTC)
:The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.