Help:Mod Profiles
Please consider the following if you intend to create an article for a modification (mod):
The Valve Developer Community wiki, is a wiki
The main function of the VDC wiki is that of any wiki, intended to contain facts relevant to the developing community. While this may stretch to include listing renowned third-party projects and mods that the community may already consider participating in or playing, it is not intended to contain personal or official pages for mods.
If you are looking for a page to house a mod, you should consider posting it in the Mod DataBase instead, because that's what that site is for.
People are allowed to alter your article
Remember that (unless you write an article as a subpage of your own User page) your article is subject to the terms of the wiki:
"Please note that all contributions to Valve Developer Community may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here."
Further, a wiki article is meant to contain a relevant summary using objective facts. Subjective words such as "awesome", "amazing", "cool" or "fun" do not adhere to wiki standards, and editors are meant to remove them.
Proof of concept
Like any wiki, articles about things that do not exist, or only exists in the mind of a few people, are not allowed, and will thus be flagged for deletion for lacking what is called a "proof of concept". Please be aware that there are many millions of active Steam users (and that's just on Steam) and most of these have had some kind of idea for a mod, so just declaring that you want to make a mod, is simply not noteworthy enough. It lies on you to provide proof that a mod is actually physically under development, such as links to official sites or pages dedicated to the mod (such as ModDB pages), as well as screenshots of models and/or levels. Posting the mod's "awesome" or thought-out storyline, or just assuring readers by writing that the work on the mod is doing well, is not enough.
If an editor can not find any sites listing the mod, or can get a hold of any screenshots for the mod, and can not tell whether the mod has ever existed, he should flag the article for deletion with the reason "Lacking proof of concept".
Checklist
So, before you write a mod article, ask yourself the following questions:
- Do you have proof of concept? (Can you (through links or screenshots) prove that the mod is more than an idea or a plan?)
- Is the mod widely known? (Has it been posted as news on other sites such as Planet Half-Life?)
- Are you prepared to accept that the mod article will be edited according to wiki rules and policies?
- Is it written as an acknowledgement of the mod, or a promotion for the mod? (Does it contain subjective wording, or unnecessary details?)
Dead mods
Articles are not removed from the wiki just because the mod has died. The mods are instead flagged as dead in these articles.
A mod can be flagged as dead if there's cause to believe that development has ceased without a final or a near-final release.
Reasons to label a mod as "dead":
- A quote from a project member stating the mod is no longer in development
- A lack of news or updates over a period of twelve months
- The mod's official website and/or entries at a modding site seem permanently gone
Please do not blank (remove all contents) of a dead mod's article, even if you are the author. The information can be retained for archival purposes (or as proof the article should be deleted if it does not meet inclusion criteria).
Formatting a mod article
Aside from spellchecking the article, and not writing it as a promotion, a mod article should include a ModStatus Template that is as complete as possible. Note that this template automatically categorizes the article.
Links to ModDB entries have their own template, called Moddb.