Fanverse Wiki:Splitting articles
This is a Fanverse Wiki policy. It is a widely accepted standard that all editors should normally follow. Significant changes to this page should reflect community consensus.
Notice: Page splitting on Fanverse Wiki is an uncommon and deliberate process. Editors should only propose splits when absolutely necessary to preserve clarity, tone, and readability.
Overview[edit | edit source]
On Fanverse Wiki, splitting articles is a rare editorial measure, only used when the size, scope, or structure of a page severely hinders navigation, storytelling clarity, or usability. Unlike wikis with thousands of micro-articles, Fanverse values cohesion, context, and presentation above page count. The emphasis is on keeping articles comprehensive, cinematic, and well-structured — not fragmented.
Split proposals should not be made casually or due to temporary growth. Instead, splits must reflect long-term editorial need, narrative integrity, and layout cohesion.
General philosophy[edit | edit source]
- Article splitting is the exception, not the rule.
- Splits should preserve in-universe immersion and out-of-universe professionalism.
- Every split must improve readability, organization, or narrative flow.
- Do not split articles to remove "unwanted" sections or to bury controversial material.
When to consider a split[edit | edit source]
Fanverse Wiki recommends article splitting only under the following conditions:
- The article has grown beyond 15,000–20,000 words of readable prose, making it difficult to read or maintain.
- A specific section has expanded into a fully distinct subtopic that cannot be effectively summarized (e.g., a character biography overshadowing a team article).
- A film, character, or season article is serving double-duty for unrelated subjects (e.g., combining lore and production in a chaotic structure).
- The article contains extensive list material (e.g., episodes, cast credits, in-universe events) better handled in a dedicated subpage.
When not to split[edit | edit source]
Avoid splitting if:
- The reason is purely aesthetic or preference-based.
- The resulting subarticle would lack sufficient standalone content.
- The content is trivial or easily summarized in a paragraph or two.
- The page in question is not under strain (length, layout, technical size, or confusion).
Specific DON'Ts[edit | edit source]
- Don’t split because a section receives heavy editing traffic.
- Don’t split for temporary formatting issues that could be solved with better layout.
- Don’t split development and lore unless absolutely unmanageable.
Summary style usage[edit | edit source]
If a split is justified, the best approach is to use the summary style method. This involves:
- Creating a clean, titled section in the main article with a short summary of the content.
- Moving the full version of that content to a new standalone article.
- Using {{Main}} or a hatnote at the top of the summary to point to the full article.
- Ensuring both pages remain logically and narratively linked.
Example[edit | edit source]
If an article like Spider-Verse: Miles includes a sprawling 3,000-word breakdown of Miles’s abilities, that section may be summarized into a few paragraphs, with the detailed breakdown moved to Powers of Miles Morales.
Attribution requirements[edit | edit source]
Whenever content is moved from one page to another, proper attribution is required per site policy. You must:
- Leave an edit summary in the new article stating the origin (e.g., “Split from Spider-Verse: Miles”).
- Use the {{Split attribution}} template if necessary.
- Maintain the page history in both locations if under dispute.
How to propose a split[edit | edit source]
Splits should always go through a transparent process:
- Start a new section on the article’s talk page titled:
== Split proposal: [Subarticle name] == - Clearly explain your rationale, including article size, structural issues, and long-term value.
- Wait for feedback. If there is no response within 7 days and the split is uncontroversial, proceed with caution.
- If objections arise, build consensus through discussion.
- Use {{Under discussion}} on the main article until the proposal is resolved.
Executing the split[edit | edit source]
Once consensus is reached:
- Move the content to the new article using standard wiki markup.
- Add appropriate templates: {{Main}}, {{Split from}}, {{Split attribution}}, or {{Summary style}} where needed.
- Clean up references and navboxes.
- Update the original article’s structure so it no longer feels “empty” or disjointed.
Naming split pages[edit | edit source]
Follow these conventions for naming split pages:
- Use precise, natural titles: e.g., Miles Morales (biography) or Doctor Doom (development)
- Avoid awkward suffixes like “/Details” or “/Extended”
- Ensure consistency with other articles in the same group or category.
Alternative solutions to splitting[edit | edit source]
Before initiating a split, consider:
- Collapsing content using {{Collapsible section}} for long lists or minor subtopics.
- Transclusion if content is used in multiple places (especially navboxes or timelines).
- Subpage usage for navigation-heavy tables or appendices (e.g., timelines or credits).
Marking for potential split[edit | edit source]
If you're unsure whether a split is needed:
- Use {{Split needed}} at the top of the article or section.
- Add a brief note on the talk page with reasoning.
- Do not perform a bold split without discussion unless it’s a clear formatting rescue.
Final note[edit | edit source]
Fanverse Wiki values structure, not sprawl. Articles are meant to be cinematic, readable, and immersive. Before splitting, always ask:
> “Will this improve the experience of someone reading this article from start to finish?”
If not, don’t split. Refactor, summarize, or reorganize instead.