If the rule regarding symbols was already in place, why were you adding the ampersand, then?
Because I was making those edits before that rule was put in place.
Not sure when that happened though, Tripredacus might know.
Overall, you either didn't read my whole post or you're taking it quite literally - not EVERYTHING that's on the cover would be allowed. As I stated, "it shouldn't be a literal transcription" of what's on the cover. A perfect example would be "Disney's Donald Duck: Goin' Quackers" - you'd certainly wouldn't change the name to "Disney's Donald Duck: Goin' "Qu@c!<e*r!s"", right? It goes without saying that was an obvious stylistic choice. Which again, was the case with the examples you gave, especially Mega Man X3; the ³ would fall under special symbols, so the name for the entry will obviously be "Mega Man X3". I mean, I may sound like a broken record, but whether you like it or not, it's common sense. The alt-name field could house "Mega Man X³" for the sake of "staying true" to what's on the cover. An exception list that's a mile long isn't needed with a set of rules that properly detail how to accurately go about doing this, which the Style Guide already covers for the most part, so...
The reason why I provided those examples originally was to argue that the
"Use the name provided by the game itself, that's on the cover or the spine. What's wrong with doing that?" statement you made in your original post is flawed and just doesn't pan out in practice. And now the goalposts have now been shifted to instead it's
"use the name on the cover, but detail the specifics of what's not allowed when using a cover as the source for naming an entry". So I think I've made my point there. But your statement below I still take issue with.
My original post was merely trying to convey that the cover can also be used the same way GameFAQs is, just make a section in the Style Guide that clearly expresses that it can't be a literal transcript of what's on it and properly detail the specifics of what's not allowed when using a cover as the source for naming an entry. I don't think it's rocket science.
But you really can't though. You can log on to GameFaqs and look at a game's page and it will immediately tell you what the title is. Because it's already provided. If you take a game's cover, you have to make your own value judgment on what stylization of the title is or isn't valid. Even if I grant you all the "obvious stuff" like 4 Resident Evil, you still have to deal with colon placement, capitalization, word placement, subtitles, and possessives. Here's an example of each one of them.
Word Spacing: Is it Mega Man or Megaman? We have people who put in both names. And I've had to edit quite a few of them over the years
https://vgcollect.com/search/megamanCapitalization: Is it littleBigPlanet or littleBIGplanet? We have people who put in both names.
https://vgcollect.com/search/littleBIGplanetIs it inFamous or inFAMOUS? This game was BOTH names at one point.
https://vgcollect.com/item/11218Words being in the title or not: Is it .hack//Quarantine or Dot Hack Part 4: Quarantine: The Final Chapter? This game was BOTH names at one point.
https://vgcollect.com/item/1325Subtitles being in the title or not: Is it Chibi-Robo! or Chibi-Robo! Plug Into Adventure!? This game was BOTH names at one point.
https://vgcollect.com/item/15958Colons: Is it Pokemon X or Pokemon: X? This game was BOTH names at one point. And remember, games don't have colons on the box. That's 100% reliant on some other process.
https://vgcollect.com/item/48620Possessives: Is it Disney/Pixar's Finding Nemo or just Finding Nemo? And how come we're not comfortable saying "M Night Shyamalan The Last Airbender" or "Lara Croft Tomb Raider: Legend" but we're okay with saying "Tony Hawk's Pro Skater?" There are so many examples of this.
Is it 007 NightFire or James Bond 007: NightFire? (or maybe it should be Nightfire??
) We have people who put in ALL THREE options.
https://vgcollect.com/search/007%3A%20NightFireThese are all REAL common sense examples that the db has been struggling with for years. And there are even others. So why even bother with trying to decipher the name based on the cover with an accompanying conditions list a mile long? If we're just going to rely on some other source of information anyway, we might as well make that information source consistently easy to use, rather than rely on "common sense" which as I've shown, doesn't work, and isn't the same among our userbase. Look at the advanced style guide for naming as it is. There are many, many other issues when it comes to game names such as
•Games with multiple subtitles
•Games with an abbreviation and full title together
•Use of hyphens
•Use of TLD
•Non-latin language names
•Use of the word "The, A or An"
•Non-english latin language games
•Logos as text replacements
•Descriptors for games with multiple cover arts
And so on. And all that information is just as useful to our user base. So to compromise, I think using GameFaqs for the basics covers most of the issues that users will trip up on for 95% of the database with naming. Again, that's what we as a community decided on. And while neither option is perfect, this option is undoubtedly the better, and I stand behind my vote and for bringing this up a couple years back in the first place.
Read the post I made
here, and the subsequent two replies, if you want to learn more.
My question for you is this: how is our current system (GameFaqs) better than making our own rules list for everything? I'm a little confused why this is even an argument, because at the end of the day, we both want things to be easier for users.