Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-45670120-20200827213414/@comment-25014407-20200828210913

First, Gamepedia and Fandom wikis are very different, and one of those differences is the target/user group. Fandom users are generally less knowledgeable about technology and terminologies, and Gamepedia users are generally a lot more direct (bar exceptions for both). Your "we should mark this thread as solved, we're done" (while you were the only one to have come to your own conclusion) or "I have more experience than you" while you are not involved can be seen as plain rude or condescending. As Fandyllic said, most of the regular users here have been at least moderating a wiki for years and years, and every situation is different, you can't make an executive decision if you were not involved in either the situation or the entire wiki. It's not a "I have an opinion about it and I am right because I know more than you". Maybe that's the Gamepedia way, I don't know, but it's not helpful if people are looking for solutions.

Second, the situation of TARDIS9 is also different from the one of the OP. In this case, the editor was trying to (in their eyes) correct the information on a page by giving maybe too much detail, against one of the admins, who was reverting it to a state that was assumedly agreed upon by local staff or the local community. In general, wikis take a wider view on a topic; if wikis like Disney Wiki or Wookieepedia were to cover every single detail, it would almost take 2 or 3 hours to read a single page. Don't make polls or actions to remove them just because you didn't agree with them, but try to understand why something is or is not covered (in detail). You can use the admin's talk page or message wall for that, but don't try to revert it back and again and again and again just because you think it needs to be there. That's in general very frowned upon as usually an unwritten rule. Sometimes, admins will block you without warning then, especially if it seems like there is no stopping anytime soon, to give them a short time-out.