User blog comment:MisterWoodhouse/A change to Shared Help on the Unified Community Platform/@comment-25205196-20200706223738/@comment-26542627-20200707010347

What do you hate about it? If your wiki doesn't have, for example, a Help:Images page (or even if it just has a navbar at the top, like in my case), the page doesn't technically exist on your wiki (there is a "Create" button), but it automatically displays the Help:Images page from Community Central, and any links to it don't appear as "red links" because in a way the page actually does exist. It also has the added bonus of keeping your readers on your wiki rather than transferring them to another sub-domain with another theme and no real link back to your wiki.

The only negative I saw is if the universal help page had content that doesn't apply to your wiki. In which case, you could create the Help:Images on your wiki and either copy over the stuff from the universal copy, or completely write your own. You'd just lose out on any worthwhile additions/changes that the universal one has.

I also looked at the wiki you have listed in your profile, and it has zero custom Help pages: https://animalcrossing.fandom.com/fr/wiki/Sp%C3%A9cial:Toutes_les_pages?namespace=12

I don't see what problem this change is trying to solve. I actually liked the automatic-transcluded Help pages.

So long as the namespace isn't disappearing and they're just changing the transclusion feature to a page redirect, I don't see what actual custom Help: content needs to get backed up. If I write my own Help:Images page or create a custom page in the Help namespace (ex. Help:Qwerty), it shouldn't be affected. If it has additions above the transcluded help page from Community Central, I should be able to go into the page's history, grab the small additions I made, and then recreate a local copy of Help:Images just as it appears before this upcoming change. It just wouldn't get the benefit of any changes that the universal one gets.

That's all if I understood correctly. I don't understand how someone could have hated this feature.