Wikipedia:Notability (video games)
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This page in a nutshell: A video game release is appropriate for a stand-alone article if it has been the subject of significant commentary in multiple published sources which are independent of the video game developer. Avoid creating new articles about re-releases or expansions if they will be short or redundant, and cover smaller releases at the article about the series or original game. |
This is an
Notability of core video games
A video game is appropriate for an article if it has been the subject of significant commentary or analysis in published sources that are independent of the game developer.
- Published sources include any reliablesources, such as newspapers, magazines, books, documentaries, websites, and consumer reports.
- Independent sources must not be primary sources, press releases (or re-prints), advertisements, manuals, official game guides, or material from business partners.[1]
- Significant commentary should report more than basic game data (such as its title, platform, publisher, and creative staff). Commentary should be critical and detailed.
- Old or international releases are more likely to be covered in sources that are not immediately available online. A reliable source that briefly mentions a title's influence on a genre or type of game can show evidence that significant commentary probably exists in print and/or non-English sources.[2]
Derivative games (such as ports, remakes, compilations, and expansions) may be covered in a Wikipedia article, but not necessarily in a separate article. See the standard below.
Awards
Awards and nominations do not by themselves demonstrate a game's notability; however, significant commentary on the award or nomination by a reliable source would meet the
For an award to create a presumption of notability, it needs to be an industry-wide independent award that has been known to generate significant commentary about a game. A few awards that have been known to meet these criteria are the
Online polls, "top 10" lists, and awards from individual publishers (such as
Notability of derivative game releases
New game releases that either expand or re-release an existing game do not always warrant a stand-alone article. Most derivative releases should be covered at an article about the original release, unless there is significant distinct game content (and
Type of release | Sequel | Expansion pack | Remake/Port | New episode | Fan disc | Compilation | Patch | Translation
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cover it? | Always | Always | Usually | Always | Always | Usually | Rarely | Rarely |
Go into detail? | Usually | Usually | Sometimes | Rarely | Sometimes | Rarely | Very Rarely | Very Rarely |
Distinct article? | Usually | Sometimes | Rarely | Very Rarely | Very Rarely | Very Rarely | Very Rarely | Very Rarely |
Exemplary articles | Halo 2 | StarCraft: Brood War | Chrono Trigger | Tales of Monkey Island | Metroid Prime: Trilogy | BioShock | Final Fantasy VI |
The above table offers advice on how to treat different types of game releases. The game manufacturer's naming or marketing is not important in considering if a stand-alone article is warranted - it is how reliable secondary sources treat the game. For example, a game may be marketed as a "new episode", but reliable sources talk about the game as a sequel. Larger releases offer more distinct content and thus justify creating a separate article, whereas smaller updates do not.
This also applies to game releases produced by fan communities (such as
See also
- Verifiability
- No original research
- Reliable sources
- Cite sources
- Naming conventions (video games)
- WikiProject Video games
Notes
- ^ Self-promotion and product placement are not the routes to having an encyclopaedia article. The published works must be someone else writing about the video game. The barometer of notability is whether people independent of the subject itself (or of its manufacturer, creator, or vendor) have actually considered the content or site worthy enough that they have written and published significant commentary that focus upon it.
- ^ Finding critical reviews for older games may be difficult as most publication was done by print gaming magazines before the explosive growth of the Internet; in addition, due to its history, the video game industry is more Japan-centric than most tech industries. Information by a single reliable third-party source in English on the games' historical retrospectives may be the only easily accessible source at times. The source does not need to go into a detailed discussion about the game, and may only briefly mention that the title was key to a genre's or classification's development.