GuildWiki talk:Style and formatting/NPCs

template brainstorm
There are several types of npc:
 * Merchant
 * Crafter
 * Collector (further into Armor, and Weapon/Item)
 * Skill trainer
 * Quest-giver
 * Mission guy/gal (the one who stands there in middle of mission "staging" zone)
 * Henchman
 * Story

In general, anyone not in a city or outpost will need a map; story NPCs and henchmen should all have nice screenshot images (and honestly, user-contributed sketches might be kind of cool too!).

What else should be added to each page? Is there a good taxonomy box idea out there? Nunix 16:20, 20 Jun 2005 (EST)

Confused
The guidelines for NPCs need to be expanded alot more. I was pretty confused about all the categories until I drew out the trees and noted the problems. It just a couple of inconsistencies that need to be cleaned up. I've actually drafted up an expanded guidelines but got stuck on several points. Basically, as already mentioned, each NPC page must have a Type, Location, and Species categories, while Nationality and Organization are optional. This is all fine and easy, especially the last three types, where it's usually at most 1 will apply. The problem comes when attempting to assign a type and location.

For location, it's fine for the majority of NPCs who appear only in one place. For certain types of NPCs, such as henchmen, they appear in multiple places. Take the Factions henchmen for example, say Sister Tai, or Mai. They appear in ALOT of places, including town areas, explorable areas, and mission areas. Do we add one category for each place they appear in? How do we handle this?

It's the same problem for type. One type each isn't enough for certain NPCs like Devona and Master Togo. They would need all of Quest Givers, Quest NPCs, Mission NPCs, and (for Devona) Henchmen. Same thing with merchants, traders, and trainers who are also Quest Givers and/or Quest NPCs, like Captain Osric and Gelsan the Outfitter.

In effect, each NPC will have at least 3 categories (which is likely rare) and all the way up to potentially 2 dozen categories for henchmen like Devona, Mhenlo, and Cynn who are also NPCs at certain points of both the Prophecies and Factions storylines.

How does everyone feel about having so many categories? I'm thinking the way to reduce the location categories would be just list the first one or two locations they appear in and put the rest under a section called "See Also", or "Also appears in", or "Other locations". But that kinda defeats the purpose of the location category if most of the location categories would be incomplete. --Ab.Er.Rant 23:45, 21 June 2006 (CDT)


 * A creatures locations will always be listed under  ==Locations==  in their page even if the categories do not list all locations. You do have a point. What do we do with something like Dragon Moss that's in 7 or 8 different places or someone like Sister Tai? I personally don't think it's a problem if we do not categorize their location in this case. --Karlos 23:54, 21 June 2006 (CDT)

I went through the Style and formatting/Bestiary carefully again and I can see additional problems on the categories guidelines. You need the species, which is fine for NPCs too. But it also needs profession. Should NPCs make use of categories like Category:Monks or stick exclusively to categories like Category:Monk NPCs instead? The locations category faces the same problem. The additional note there is worse. Category:White Mantle according to the bestiary guidelines is a species, whereas to the NPC guidelines, it's an organization. Which applies? Perhaps NPCs shouldn't be listed as a subset of Bestiary, since Category:NPCs aren't really beasts right? For me, I'd suggest that since Category:Humans is under [:Category:Beasts, then human NPCs should just be Category:Human NPCs; totally separating the two category trees at the species level.

Also, one more thing. Is it generally accepted to use "Skills Used" and "Quests given"? I've actually been using "Known Skills" and "Quests offered", so I suppose I should update them to match all the other pages. I think Category:Quest Givers is rather awkward but have no better idea than "Quest Source NPCs", which also sounds awkward. Any particular reason why it's "Skills Used" and not "Skills used", but it's "Quests given" and not "Quests Given"? -:- Ab.Er.Rant (Talk)


 * I agree that NPCs shouldn't be organized as a subset of Bestiary. However, "beasts" here is used to refer to all creatures, so all NPCs *should* be able to be found under Bestiary through some manner.  White Mantle is organization composed strictly of Humans, I'm not seeing where in the Bestiary guideline that defines it as a species.  As for upper/lower casing it, go lower. - 08:06, 10 July 2006 (CDT)

Location Category
No other opinions after several days? I would venture to propose that NPCs (possibly the whole of Bestiary) to specify only a Region category, and not location. With a region (or regions) as categories, a Location section can then detail each of the different locations within the regions a particular monster or NPC appear in.

I think I will start with all the henchmen first, and then later propagate to all other NPCs unless someone says otherwise. Ab.Er.Rant 08:03, 25 June 2006 (CDT)


 * Don't use a regions category. That just includes areas and cities in the region. The main reason you see the NPCs categories and sections messed up is people having that same approach you just mentioned. X decides that NPCS should not be classified as Monks but as Monk NPCS (which would be a sub-category of Monks), but then X does 10% of the work and leaves or is away. Then Y thinks that it should be "Quests offered" not "given" and so on.
 * Unless you plan on doing the whole change yourself, do not consider lack of response to be a green light for you to start the change. That only results in messed up pages.
 * Like I said above, just don't list any location categories. List the specific locations in the Locations section of the article. --Karlos 11:25, 25 June 2006 (CDT)


 * Ok, I'll just leave the locations category out for now, or maybe just one or two primary ones and leave the rest in the section. I'll standardise the other categories starting with each type of NPC and work from there, see how it goes. And I can make all the changes, spread across several days of course... :P --Ab.Er.Rant 19:11, 25 June 2006 (CDT)
 * I could aid in renaming categories/moving articles/etc using Galil.bot if I get specific rules. I do believe we should leave the town/outpost categories be though, and put those categories as sub-categories of region-categories, of course that might be what you suggested. :p &mdash; Galil  19:29, 25 June 2006 (CDT)

Section and Categories proposal
Looking for comments on my proposed sections and categories before I actually try to add it into the guidelines:
 * Sections (in order)
 * Description
 * Location - grouped by regions, with any conditions noted
 * Quests Given - quests that can be obtained from this NPC
 * Quests Involved In - quests that somehow involve this NPC, including being a quest rewarder
 * Skills Used
 * Evaluation - includes behavior notes, pros and cons, and advice or tips
 * Dialogue - includes those with a proper message box or those that advance the storyline
 * Quotes - just any random text bubbles
 * Notes
 * Categories (in order)
 * Type - list all types alphabetically
 * Species - list 1, eg. Humans, not Human NPCs. Type already identifies NPC; unless it's better to have a subcategory of NPCs in every species?
 * Profession - optionally list 1, e.g. Monks, not Monk NPCs; unless it's better to have a subcategory of NPCs in every profession?
 * Nationality - optionally list 1
 * Organization - optionally list 1

For Nationality, I'm thinking this is the full list so far: "Ascalonians, Canthans, Deldrimor, Elonians, Krytans, Margonites, Orrians".

For Organization, it's pretty messy right now, but I thinkn this is likely enough: "Ascalon Army, Canthan Emperors, Canthan Heroes, Celestial Ministry, Kurzick, Heroes of Ascalon, Flaming Scepter, Lionguard, Luxon, Shining Blade, Stone Summit, White Mantle". Mursaat could be an organization too. And I don't think we should bother with categorizing NPCs by campaign at all. --Ab.Er.Rant 01:04, 26 June 2006 (CDT)
 * The Mursaat can be part of a new Unseen Ones category. Also, for both the species and the professions, after much thought, it's better to have one NPC subcategory for each species and profession with NPCs. That way, all the NPCs can be grouped separately and the category listings of hostile creatures aren't cluttered with NPC listings. --Ab.Er.Rant 20:09, 27 June 2006 (CDT)
 * Just come across one more thing... is it necessary to distinguish between Category:Mission NPCs and Category:Quest NPCs? I think the former can be folded into the latter, or we can just use both and accept the fact that some NPCs can be in both. --Ab.Er.Rant 21:47, 27 June 2006 (CDT)


 * Hmm... four days and no one has an opinion? Considering the change User:PanSola:PanSola made (calling it 'chatter' instead of my 'quote'), I suppose I should rename by section header to 'Chatter' as well... although I personally feel Quotes sound better, since some of the henchmen battle cries are more than just chatter. So I feel that Quotes is more encompassing, unless we break them down into even more subsections... --Ab.Er.Rant 18:32, 29 June 2006 (CDT)


 * "Quotes", to me, feel overly encompassing, and encompasses things beyond the speech bubbles. - 22:24, 29 June 2006 (CDT)


 * "Chatter" is a very informal word and I would advise against it.  &lt;LordBiro&gt;/&lt;Talk&gt; 11:58, 30 June 2006 (CDT)

Prefixing Type categories with continent name
I noticed that Jailbyrd had actually created two new categories specifically for Canthans, Category:Canthan Collectors and Category:Canthan Weaponsmiths. At first, I thought it was pretty pointless, but after some thought, it does have merit. This helps split up the type by the campaign they're in. I'm thinking perhaps "Tyrian collectors" should exist too, and perhaps deleting "Collectors" altogether. Same thing for all the other NPC types. It's for long-term benefit too, when chapter 3 comes along. What I'm wondering is whether Anet would continue to introduce new continents for each new campaign. It's altogether possible for them to reuse the Tyrian continent for something else. Perhaps we could use the campaign name as a prefix instead, like "Prophecies collectors", "Factions collectors", and "Nightfall collectors". Or maybe make it shorter, like "Collectors (Ch1)", "Collectors (Ch2)", etc. Anyone have any thoughts on this? Or should we just stick to lumping all NPCs into a particular type? --Ab.Er.Rant 04:34, 9 July 2006 (CDT)


 * I support the format: "Collectors (Prophecies)". See the unsuccessiful discussion I tried to start regarding whether it should be prefix or suffix at GuildWiki talk:Style and formatting as well as an older vote specifically on on suffix format at GuildWiki talk:Style and formatting - 05:24, 9 July 2006 (CDT)


 * Ok... so how has your crusade gone? :) I suppose I'm obligated to wait a couple of days before starting to filter out the NPC types into X (Prophecies) and X (Factions) :P --Ab.Er.Rant 06:26, 9 July 2006 (CDT)


 * It also kinda led to the question of how much we want to go... I think limiting this suffix to the NPC type is enough for now, since that's the only place where a suffix identifying the campaign an NPC belongs to is important. Having a suffix for species, professions, and organizations might be overkill. --Ab.Er.Rant 06:52, 9 July 2006 (CDT)


 * I thought I was done with the crusade as far as the articles cagetories I cared about (armor, skills etc). My crusade wasn't going around and split things, but going around and rename things that got split. - 08:02, 10 July 2006 (CDT)

NPC area
In addition to the previous issue that not much people have commented on (the prefix/suffix thingy), let me highlight another one. Apaprently, most, if not all, the new NPC articles for Factions uses one of area/location/region/mission categories. I actually removed it such categories from most of the Tyrian NPC articles. If anybody thinks that such categories are only logical and proper (which I don't think so, due to some NPCs appearing in too many places), then may I suggest that we suffix it with "NPCs"? Like "Category:Wajjun Bazaar NPCs" rather than just "Wajjun Bazaar". The former helps filter out all NPCs into a subcategory. The latter only manages to produce a mixed category. Also, please help define the rules for location categories if that is your preference. Or maybe I will... if enough people think that some sort of location or region category is preferable. --Ab.Er.Rant 01:39, 10 July 2006 (CDT)
 * I do not see the need to filter all NPCs into a subcategory. Mixed category is fine.  But if you want to rename the mixed category to something more specific (but remains fixed), I have nothing against that. - 07:59, 10 July 2006 (CDT)


 * Well, one of the my reasons for splitting off the NPCs was because of the splitting off of the bosses, it just makes for an easier lookup and reference. Why are bosses placed into a subcategory? Because they allow skill capture? The same thing can be said of NPCs, they are all non-hostile. It helps when you want to, say, add something standard to all NPC pages, or like the previous need to add skill icons to all bestiary pages.\
 * A special case in point are NPCs who are also bosses. It could be confusing if a particular boss is both "Humans" and a "Human Bosses", but other "Human Bosses" are not in "Humans". If there was an NPC subcategory, this this special case of a "Human Bosses" would also not be in "Humans" but in "Human NPCs" instead... but I know, it's just mostly some nitpicking on my side. --Ab.Er.Rant @ User:Aberrant80 (msg) 00:32, 11 July 2006 (CDT)


 * Actually, I'm not thinking about issues with Human NPCs. I'm thinking about Wajuun Bazaar NPCs vs the rest of the Wajuun Bazaar category.  I don't think it necessary to sub-divide locational categories.  As for the Human NPCs issue, I think NPCs should simply be sub-divided by funcitonality, and not intersect with the species category tree at all.  I don't think it matters in terms of categorization if an armor crafter is a dwarf, tengu, or human.  - 00:40, 11 July 2006 (CDT)