Vampire Survivors devs launch official wiki "free of ads, banners, and all of the junk that gets in your way"
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Goddamn that's awesome. Had no idea after hundreds of GW2 hours.
Here's the most useful one, IMO:
/wiki et
It takes you to the event timers page, so you can see when the world events are going to happen.
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Instructions unclear.
Locked it behind a Discord community instead.
I know this is a joke.
But seriously from my heart
Fuck you.
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Try the browser add-on Indie Wiki Buddy.
It suggests a better wiki when you browse one on Fandom.
edit: there is an open issue to add the official Vampire Survivors wiki: https://github.com/KevinPayravi/indie-wiki-buddy/issues/1102
Just to add on to this, in those unfortunate cases where there really is only Fandom, you can use an extension like LibRedirect which will redirect any Fandom pages to a breezewiki instance, which is a stripped down, privacy respecting, no BS front end for Fandom.
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and then wiki.gg gets bought, as other wikis got. No thanks.
Write content in a community mediawiki maintained by the community instead.
For anyone looking for a wonderful example of this, check out the RuneScape wiki. It’s hosted by a company that is partnered with the game maker, and is fully maintained by the community. It is the single most expansive and in-depth wiki I have ever seen. It is truly the gold standard for what a wiki should aspire to be.
It has everything
resource you’ll need to get [y] experience, or what your estimated return on investment will be for turning [x] resource into [y] product.The game has over 250 quests, (and not just basic fetch or kill quests like most MMO’s have) and the wiki has in-depth walkthroughs (including in-game screenshots) for every single one.
You can even open the wiki directly from the game. There’s a “Wiki” button on the chat box, so you can search the wiki directly via chat, and it opens in your desktop browser.
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For anyone looking for a wonderful example of this, check out the RuneScape wiki. It’s hosted by a company that is partnered with the game maker, and is fully maintained by the community. It is the single most expansive and in-depth wiki I have ever seen. It is truly the gold standard for what a wiki should aspire to be.
It has everything
resource you’ll need to get [y] experience, or what your estimated return on investment will be for turning [x] resource into [y] product.The game has over 250 quests, (and not just basic fetch or kill quests like most MMO’s have) and the wiki has in-depth walkthroughs (including in-game screenshots) for every single one.
You can even open the wiki directly from the game. There’s a “Wiki” button on the chat box, so you can search the wiki directly via chat, and it opens in your desktop browser.
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Breezewiki?
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Instructions unclear.
Locked it behind a Discord community instead.
Guess whose doing an IPO and will sell all its data plus get advertisements everywhere? Yep, Discord..
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Here's the most useful one, IMO:
/wiki et
It takes you to the event timers page, so you can see when the world events are going to happen.
I also like
/wiki ezd
which opens a page telling you how to quickly do the daily and weekly objectives. -
I'm surprised the OSRS wiki isn't mentioned more. The game itself is very community oriented as well.
OSRS wiki is BY FAR the best wiki in the entire industry.
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We did the same for The Talos Principle Wiki.
The community is hosting its own MediaWiki rather than rely on Fandom.
Same for us with the Cyber Knights: Flashpoint wiki. More devs should learn that self-hosting a community wiki for their game is not that hard.
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