Editing Talk:Sequence break
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::::::I feel like all sequence breaks should be documented, but not all of them deserve a section. Tremendous Sniffer without bomb rocks can be included in a "Minor breaks" section, under a single bullet point, and be described in one or two sentences. It's still there, documented, but it's not taking up an entire section, since it's not as important as something like Early Winged Pikmin. I think it's best to document too much rather than too little – as long as it "breaks" any intended sequence, it's a sequence break, and it's not like minor, debatable breaks are useless. They're useful for people who want to know every little sequence break out there, and in games, quite a few important sequence breaks stemmed from very minor discoveries. | ::::::I feel like all sequence breaks should be documented, but not all of them deserve a section. Tremendous Sniffer without bomb rocks can be included in a "Minor breaks" section, under a single bullet point, and be described in one or two sentences. It's still there, documented, but it's not taking up an entire section, since it's not as important as something like Early Winged Pikmin. I think it's best to document too much rather than too little – as long as it "breaks" any intended sequence, it's a sequence break, and it's not like minor, debatable breaks are useless. They're useful for people who want to know every little sequence break out there, and in games, quite a few important sequence breaks stemmed from very minor discoveries. | ||
::::::As for the path mistakes article having duplicate information, it's really hard to decide. I feel like the "correct" thing to do would be to document each glitch location and results in the path mistakes article. Then document the ways a user can ''exploit'' that mistake in this article. Finally, each article would also cross-reference the other for the complete picture. But that would suck, since people would have to hop back and forth between articles just to understand everything. Usually, it's preferred to stick to one article instead of spreading the same info over two articles, as to avoid copy-paste and forgotten update problems, but in cases like this, we can't just leave the user experience to suffer! An alternative approach would be similar to what was said above: use the path mistakes article to document silly mistakes, like Pikmin getting stuck against a wall, and then include a "See more" section or something that points to this article. In this article, we would document ''other'' path mistakes that are more important, given a much more detailed description, and given an explanation of how they can be exploited for sequence breaking. This way the path mistakes article would still teach readers ''all'' known path mistakes (even if it has to point the reader to a different page to do so), but the sequence break article can still have everything it needs to be useful and practical in and of itself. — '''{''[[User:Espyo|Espyo]]''<sup>[[User talk:Espyo|T]]</sup>}''' 11:11, September 5, 2021 (EDT) | ::::::As for the path mistakes article having duplicate information, it's really hard to decide. I feel like the "correct" thing to do would be to document each glitch location and results in the path mistakes article. Then document the ways a user can ''exploit'' that mistake in this article. Finally, each article would also cross-reference the other for the complete picture. But that would suck, since people would have to hop back and forth between articles just to understand everything. Usually, it's preferred to stick to one article instead of spreading the same info over two articles, as to avoid copy-paste and forgotten update problems, but in cases like this, we can't just leave the user experience to suffer! An alternative approach would be similar to what was said above: use the path mistakes article to document silly mistakes, like Pikmin getting stuck against a wall, and then include a "See more" section or something that points to this article. In this article, we would document ''other'' path mistakes that are more important, given a much more detailed description, and given an explanation of how they can be exploited for sequence breaking. This way the path mistakes article would still teach readers ''all'' known path mistakes (even if it has to point the reader to a different page to do so), but the sequence break article can still have everything it needs to be useful and practical in and of itself. — '''{''[[User:Espyo|Espyo]]''<sup>[[User talk:Espyo|T]]</sup>}''' 11:11, September 5, 2021 (EDT) | ||