Wookieepedia: Difference between revisions

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*[[Lurmen/Legends|Mygeetan]] &mdash; before being given the name "Lurmen," "Mygeetan" began as a fanon nickname on Wookieepedia for the nameless natives of [[Mygeeto/Legends|Mygeeto]]. Later this term was adopted in ''[[The Essential Atlas]]''.
*[[Lurmen/Legends|Mygeetan]] &mdash; before being given the name "Lurmen," "Mygeetan" began as a fanon nickname on Wookieepedia for the nameless natives of [[Mygeeto/Legends|Mygeeto]]. Later this term was adopted in ''[[The Essential Atlas]]''.
*[[Broon Ters]] was originally a player-chosen name in ''[[Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords]]'' used for the Jedi Exile, which was uploaded in a [[:File:PazaakBroonTersDotonHet-KotOR2.jpg|screenshot]] on the Wookieepedia. This screenshot was later [[:File:BroonTers2-CSWE.jpg|printed]] in ''[[The Complete Star Wars Encyclopedia]]'', making the name [[canon]] for several years. But in November 2011, the publication of ''[[The Old Republic: Revan]]'' clarified that the Exile's name is actually Meetra Surik.
*[[Broon Ters]] was originally a player-chosen name in ''[[Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords]]'' used for the Jedi Exile, which was uploaded in a [[:File:PazaakBroonTersDotonHet-KotOR2.jpg|screenshot]] on the Wookieepedia. This screenshot was later [[:File:BroonTers2-CSWE.jpg|printed]] in ''[[The Complete Star Wars Encyclopedia]]'', making the name [[canon]] for several years. But in November 2011, the publication of ''[[The Old Republic: Revan]]'' clarified that the Exile's name is actually Meetra Surik.
*[[631 model B1 battle droid]] was a conjectural title for the 631 model of [[B1-series battle droid]]s despite a non-conjectural title being available, but the [[Star Wars: Build the Millennium Falcon 56|fifty-sixth issue]] of [[De Agostini]]'s [[Star Wars: Build the Millennium Falcon (De Agostini)|''Star Wars: Build the Millennium Falcon'']] magazine canonised the name nonetheless.<ref name="BMF56">{{BuildFalconCite|56|Starship Fact File|Skytop Station Battlesphere}}</ref>
*[[631 model B1 battle droid]] was a conjectural title for the 631 model of [[B1-series battle droid]]s despite a non-conjectural title being available, but the [[Star Wars: Build the Millennium Falcon 56|fifty-sixth issue]] of [[De Agostini]]'s [[Star Wars: Build the Millennium Falcon (De Agostini)|''Star Wars: Build the Millennium Falcon'']] magazine canonised the name nonetheless.<ref name="BMF56">Non-Canon Ref</ref>
*As a joke on Wookieepedia titling the article for the first [[Sith]] in the new ''Star Wars'' canon as "[[unidentified rogue Jedi]]," author [[Jack Mitchell]] referred to the character as "the nameless founder" in ''[[The Odyssey of Star Wars: An Epic Poem]]'', published in 2021.
*As a joke on Wookieepedia titling the article for the first [[Sith]] in the new ''Star Wars'' canon as "[[unidentified rogue Jedi]]," author [[Jack Mitchell]] referred to the character as "the nameless founder" in ''[[The Odyssey of Star Wars: An Epic Poem]]'', published in 2021.



Latest revision as of 06:15, 27 March 2023

"Wookieepedia is a lavish and stunning homage to the Star Wars pop cultural phenomenon. Thanks to its professional appearance, the scope of its content, the quality of its writers and diligence of its administrators, Wookieepedia has become a valuable resource to fans both casual and obsessive, as well as to Star Wars authors. It's becoming the new nexus for everyone who wants to know as much as Yoda about that galaxy far, far away."
Abel G. Peña[src]

Wookieepedia is a wiki that was launched on March 4, 2005 (as Star Wars Wiki), and strives to be the premier source of information on all aspects of the Star Wars universe. Maintained by volunteer editors, Wookieepedia documents content from the Star Wars Canon and Legends continuities, encompassing films, novels, games, and other media, as well as information of value to fans. The Star Wars wiki is inspired by Wikipedia, but expands on Star Wars information in greater detail and with more freedom than Wikipedia can. Wookieepedia was founded when Wikipedia users began to complain of the overabundance of minutiae related to Star Wars appearing on Wikipedia. Since then, it has expanded to become one of the largest wikis on the Internet.

As a fan-created encyclopedia, Wookieepedia is not intended to be a primary source, nor is it a replacement for the Encyclopedia, the Databank, or any other official source. Rather, it serves as a fan effort to summarize all aspects of the Star Wars universe in the best way possible, while pointing the reader to the respective official sources.

History

The founding of Wookieepedia

Evolution of a wiki

"So we'd call it Wookieepedia?"
―Chad Barbry, first suggesting the name of the Star Wars Wiki[src]
Co-founder Steven Greenwood at Celebration IV

Wikipedia (founded in January 15, 2001) is a collaboratively developed free content encyclopedia, covering a wide variety of topics, and has millions of articles.[1] It is a general-knowledge encyclopedia, rather than being specific to one topic (as Wookieepedia is Star Wars–specific). Because of this, it is not always particularly friendly to in-depth knowledge specific to a given fictional universe.[2][3]

Chad Barbry, under the screenname of "Cbarbry," was a regular contributor to Wikipedia since October 17, 2004.[4] So was Steven Greenwood, under the screenname of "Riffsyphon1024," since January 5, 2005.[5] Greenwood soon started sorting the various Star Wars articles on the site. As Wikipedia was concerned, only notable items would have complete articles, with the rest of the minor subjects with descriptions on a giant list. Planets, characters, weapons, and vehicles were all done in this manner. Over a short period of time, Greenwood found that he disliked this format and sought another way to gather and place information on the saga and its Expanded Universe.[6][2] On January 21, Greenwood posted on a section on a talk page regarding the creation of a new Star Wars Portal, but suggested that instead of a portal it should be a wiki, citing Halo Wiki (now Halopedia) as inspiration, as well as TheForce.net's Completely Unofficial Star Wars Encyclopedia.[3]

Co-founder Chad Barbry

Two days later, Chad Barbry entered the discussion, immediately coining the word "Wookieepedia",[7] while Greenwood proposed "Wicketpedia". Together they began working out ideas.[3] Both agreed that this new project would run alongside Wikipedia as a separate, but equal entity—something more than simply a WikiProject. However, since Steven was not sure how a new wiki would be created, Barbry contacted Angela of then Wikicities (then Wikia, now Fandom) and requested the creation of the new wiki.

Wiki creation

The very first Star Wars Wiki logo (5–22 March 2005)

Other Wikipedia contributors seemed to be getting more hostile toward new Star Wars articles, so in February 2005, Barbry decided to make a request of the Wikipedia Board of Trustees to make a "Star Wars Wiki." His intent was more than just another WikiProject, but an official sister project similar to Wikiquotes. He thought the best solution was a separate, but linked project—a project that was separate enough for the "anti-cruft" Wikipedians, but still one that was officially Wikipedia, so there would be no need for redundant articles between the projects.

In early March 2005, after meeting, the board came back with their answer. They did not want to move Wikipedia in the direction proposed by Barbry, but recommended creating a Star Wars Wikia. Angela of Wikia was on the Board of Trustees, and contacted Barbry to let him know of the board's decision and to set up the new Star Wars Wiki.[8] Part of the process that Angela set up was creating interwiki links so Wikipedia could link to Star Wars Wiki articles and vice versa.

The wiki came online on March 4, 2005, although it sat idle for a few days. Barbry, now under the screenname "WhiteBoy,"[8] was the first non–Wikia staff user to officially edit the new wiki on March 9, starting with the logo and the moving of articles from Wikipedia to Star Wars Wiki space. The next day, Greenwood joined the site, using his previous Wikipedia screenname.[9] WhiteBoy was given bureaucrat rights by Wikia on the same day.[10] A third Wikipedian edited that day as well, and was able to add some key image templates to the wiki, before leaving the project altogether.[11] By the first few months, numbers of editors from both Wikipedia and across the web would dramatically increase.

For a brief time, there was some confusion as to how to move articles over from Wikipedia. Barbry devised a template for use on Wikipedia to place on talk pages of articles of interest, alerting users that the article would be redirected or moved entirely. The idea was to move as many existing articles from Wikipedia to the new wiki, under the GFDL, making sure to save those under threat of deletion first, and then "wookify" them to the new wiki's standards. The hope was that, though separate, Wikipedians would begin to put the more obscure articles (essentially anything but the most encyclopedic of articles) in the Star Wars Wiki. Main articles, such as Luke Skywalker, would remain at Wikipedia.

Wikipedians in general ultimately saw the Star Wars Wiki as an external site, one not affiliated with Wikipedia enough to actually "transwiki" articles over, like one would with Wikibooks or Wikirecipe. Creating redirects to the Star Wars Wiki was not what the Wikipedians had in mind, and they requested that Barbry and Greenwood immediately cease what they believed was legal transwikification;[12] however, articles could still be copied and pasted under the GFDL copyleft license and then "wookified" to fit the scheme of the Star Wars–themed wiki, making sure to place an in-universe article in past tense, or remove redundant sentences. In this aspect, it was decided to have all articles, not just those that were more trivial, lesser known, or more detailed, at the wiki.

Later articles were copied in this fashion and the originals were left alone on Wikipedia for its users to edit under its rules. Eventually Wookieepedia would develop so many articles that Wikipedia would no longer have any to copy. It should also be noted that Wookieepedia was created independently of the Wikimedia Foundation and of any events occurring on Wikipedia.

Great LucasCruft Purge

The second Star Wars Wiki logo (22 March 2005 – 8 January 2006)

In March of 2005, perhaps unaware of the formation of the new wiki, a Wikipedian (considered by some a deletionist who wished to prove a point) began to place several Star Wars articles in the Votes for Deletion system (now Articles for Deletion) in an attempt to get these articles deleted from Wikipedia. The purge was later dubbed the "Great LucasCruft Purge" by Greenwood himself.[13] It was Greenwood's goal to save as many articles from this individual before the damage was made permanent, and would then impede Star Wars Wiki's ability to grow as it did within the first month. One such article that became a focus of this battle was Order D6-66, which became one of the first stub articles added to the new wiki via the "transwiki" process. The purge garnered the Star Wars Wiki a great deal of public attention, which gave some the erroneous impression that Wookieepedia was created because of the purge.

By year

It is requested that this article section be expanded. Please improve it in any way that you see fit, and remove this notice once the article section is more complete.

2005

Community developments

Just days after the official founding, administrative powers were given to Greenwood (Riffsyphon1024) by Barbry (WhiteBoy). This set up the dual administrator system until the adminships of the users QuentinGeorge, Aidje, and SparqMan later in the year. Further on, StarNeptune, MarcK, and Imperialles were voted in as administrators in December.

Wookieepedian of the Month (WOTM) was first started in June 2005, with Imperialles as the first user to be recognized by the community for his contributions. Aidje, SparqMan, QuentinGeorge, JustinGann, MarcK, Azizlight, and Silly Dan were also awarded WOTM in 2005.[14]

Content developments

The wiki, now going under the moniker of "Wookieepedia," developed a steady rate of contributions by new members from all over, and over time lost its reliance on Wikipedia. Eventually Wookieepedia became the primary name for the wiki and an official renaming took place with the creation of a new logo by Tracy Duncan (Dark Spork).

July brought the first Quotes of the Day on Wookieepedia. The number of quotes later increased and passed through four subcategories, and QotD/In-Universe was the most edited page on Wookieepedia for a time.[15] In the same month, Wookieepedia's largest ever boost came when an explosion of editors hit the site, sending the wiki's article count over 10,000. Factors to this expansion could be attributed to advertising and the release of Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith. By the end of the year, Wookieepedia's article count had surpassed 20,000. (See wiki growth table below.)

In September 2005, Did You Know? was created as an experiment and added to the Main Page, where it is now maintained as an active feature.

The Consensus Track, a voting and discussion system designed to improve site-wide policies and practices, was formed onto a single page in October 2005. In the same month, Eric Przybylski of Nav-Computer.com allowed Wookieepedia to use his fan-made sector maps on certain articles. His maps have since been replaced with versions taken directly from official sources.

2006

Community developments

jSarek, Azizlight, and Kuralyov were elected administrators in January.[16] Riffsyphon1024 was made bureaucrat in February, joining WhiteBoy.[17] Jaymach, Silly Dan, and Darth Culator were elected admins in the first half of the year, while SFH, LtNOWIS, Sentry, Breathesgelatin, Xwing328, and Cull Tremayne became admins in the latter half. Sikon was elected bureaucrat in November.

StarNeptune, Jack Nebulax, CooperTFN, Jaymach, Sikon, SFH, Rmfitzgerald50, Erik Pflueger, Sentry, Ozzel, LtNOWIS, and Borsk Fey'lya were Wookieepedians of the Month for 2006.

Content developments
Wookieepedia's Main Page in Monobook Lite skin, August 2006

Wookieepedia welcomed its first bot on February 8. Maintained by Sikon, R2-D2 was designed to clean up instances of repeating words, categories, as well as clean the sandbox page. Since then, another bot named AL-BRT, maintained by Exiledjedi, has made Special:Editcount/AL-BRT total edits on Wookieepedia.[18]

A new Forum area dubbed the Senate Hall was constructed in March 2006 as part of Wikia's MediaWiki updates, and as a result, the Community Portal talk page was no longer the primary form of wikiwide discussion. Senate Hall was chosen as a name that would not be considered too cliché or overly used for a Star Wars name. Consensus Track was subsequently moved into the forums, and becoming its own section, used specifically for policy creation and alteration on the wiki.

The WookieeProjects named Aliens, Images, the New Sith Wars, and The New Essential Guide to Characters were launched on June 6, October 4, October 28, and November 1, respectively.

2007

Community developments
WookieeCast logo

On February 20, 2007, the first Wookiee-Cast was posted. The podcast was parody and commentary by Thefourdotelipsis on subjects relating to Wookieepedia and Star Wars in general. It did not, however, represent the official views of the wiki. The Wookiee-Cast podcasts were released throughout 2007, but have since been on hiatus.

Over the course of the spring leading up the 30th anniversary of Star Wars, Wookieepedia held votes for the Coolest thing ever! and Lamest thing ever! with Darth Vader and SuperShadow winning respectively.

In May, at least ten Wookieepedians from across the globe attended Celebration IV to help monitor Wookieepedia's table alongside The Completely Unofficial Star Wars Encyclopedia founder Bob Vitas, advertise the wiki, and host a trivia contest named "Stump the Wookiee." In the months before the convention, admins and users came across a notice by Mary Franklin that a group could obtain a table at CIV for free. Immediately the wiki reacted and set up a page for those interested as well as other details of the event. By February, it was known that Wookieepedia won the table and final preparations were made.

A group of Wookieepedians after the Stump the Wookiee contest at Celebration IV

Some users and administrators that attended and helped man the table alongside Vitas included Riffsyphon1024, Xwing328, jSarek, LtNOWIS, Ozzel, Graestan, Taybo20, Azizlight, Adamwankenobi, and Lord Hydronium. As a result of Wookieepedia's appearance and contest at Celebration IV, it was mentioned by the official site for the first time, marking another level of awareness in the Star Wars community. In addition, the event allowed the wiki to express itself to the fans directly.

In 2007, Imperialles and jSarek were made bureaucrats while Sikon lost his bureaucratship. Jaymach and Sentry also lost their adminship, but Atarumaster88, Green tentacle, Ozzel, Lord Hydronium, Havac, Greyman, Gonk, Thefourdotelipsis, Eyrezer, and Graestan are elected administrators. In addition, I need a name, Darth Oblivion, Enochf, Jorrel Fraajic, and AdmirableAckbar were vested rollback privileges by the community.

In February, the Inquisitorius was formed to maintain the featured article system. The first Inquisitors were Atarumaster88, Cull Tremayne, Darth Culator, Havac, Lord Hydronium, StarNeptune, Thefourdotelipsis, Breathesgelatin, Eyrezer, Jaina Solo, Tinwe, and Xwing328. Later in the year, they were joined by Imperialles, Gonk, Green tentacle, Greyman, Graestan, and Hobbes15.

Wookieepedians of the Month for 2007 are Atarumaster88, Volemlock, Jaina Solo, Xwing328, Thefourdotelipsis, Enochf, Kuralyov, Eyrezer, Darth Culator, Greyman, I need a name, Cull Tremayne, AdmirableAckbar, and Green tentacle.

Content developments

Wookieepedia's Reference desk became the new Knowledge Bank within the forums, where general questions on Star Wars not relating specifically to articles or Wookieepedia could be asked.

The wiki's Main Page underwent a major change, which allowed for exploration of the Star Wars universe within films, Expanded Universe, and in-universe categories to be hidden on a subpage with the use of Javascript. In addition, the single search icon in Wookieepedia's sidebar was upgraded in April to include rotating search icons.

In May, the Votes for Deletion page was renamed to the more in-universe-sounding Trash compactor.

The WookieeProjects Knights of the Old Republic and Tales of the Jedi were launched on April 13 and August 27 respectively. One of the largest project undertaken by the community, the Image Categorization Project (ICP) under WookieeProject Images, was created on October 21.

2008

Community developments

In late February 2008, a Facebook fan page for Wookieepedia was started by Riffsyphon1024. It had over 67,000 fans in April 2014, but is now no longer maintained by Wookieepedians.

Content developments
Wookieepedia's Main Page in Monaco skin, February 2008

Wookieepedia began its fourth year on March 4, 2008. A new project of Wookieepedia was the interview process with established authors, artists, actors, and anyone else related to the creation of the Star Wars universe in order to gain more insight for its articles. Some of Wookieepedia's first interviews were given to authors Kevin J. Anderson and Tom Veitch and artist Chris Gossett. This project, however, was short-lived in gaining access to interviewees.

WookieeProjects Ewoks, Legacy Era, The Force Unleashed, and Ambition were launched on May 26, June 8, September 30, and November 21, respectively.

By August of 2008, the wiki had reached 60,000 articles.[19]

2009

As with many wikis over time, certain features render other ones redundant or useless. Such was the case during what was described by some Wookieepedians as the "Great List Purge" that occurred in late December 2008 and early January 2009, where many old lists created years before were simply out of date as categories had accumulated a far greater number of articles on each topic.

The start of 2009 also saw the addition of an official blog to Wookieepedia, named the Wookieepedia Newsnet. The blog began regular entries in January, with regular features summarizing monthly Featured Article output, Consensus Track results, Wookieepedian of the Month interviews, and Canon Updates. An RSS feed for the blog was added to the Main Page on April 1st, 2009, with the blog receiving an impressive 1,072 hits on that day.

WookieeProjects Real World Music, The Clone Wars, Galaxies, and Atlas were launched on April 13, April 14, June 13, and September 2, respectively.

2010

Wookieepedia's Main Page in the Wikia skin, October 2010.

July 2010 brought forth a new classification of article, partly inspired by Wikipedia practices. Improvement of minor articles and stubs would lead to the creation of comprehensive articles, those which were complete topics, but too small to be either Good Articles or Featured Articles.

In October 2010, Wookieepedia underwent another skin change by Wikia (see right).

WookieeProjects Star Wars Encyclopedia, The Old Republic, and Astrography were launched in March, on April 22, and on May 16, respectively.

2011

In September 2011, an overhaul at StarWars.com resulted in a new Encyclopedia with every entry linking to a Wookieepedia article.

By November, the Senate Hall was altered to include listings for sticky threads, which would stick to the top of a separate list.

WookieeProjects The New Jedi Order, Newsnet, and Video Games were launched on April 14, in June, and in July, respectively.

Wookieepedia's First Barn Burner started in May, beginning with a focus on the site's titular subject: Wookiees. A second Barn Burner, held in August, focused on weapons, while Wookieepedia's First Shed Scorcher: Dilonexa, began on October 22. The third Barn Burner, launched in December, focused on subjects relating to the film Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace.

2012

Wookieepedia attended a table at Celebration VI in Orlando, Florida and was interviewed by The Dork Night Podcast.[20]

In February, the wiki surpassed 90,000 articles.

WookieeProjects Warfare and Novels were launched on April 6 and August 22, respectively. The fourth Barn Burner, focused on droids, began in May, while the fifth Barn Burner began in November focusing on politics.

2013

On January 10, Wookieepedia surpassed 100,000 articles, with the creation of the article Jela Reneke. The sixth Barn Burner, held in May, focused on Hutts.

2014

With January came the seventh Barn Burner, with a focus on creatures of the Star Wars universe. WookieeProject Rebels was launched on February 5.

With Lucasfilm Ltd.'s announcement on April 25, 2014 to replace the Expanded Universe with the "Legends" brand, members of Wookieepedia subsequently discussed and voted to retain all information within Star Wars media,[21] but split applicable articles into their respective canonical parts—Canon and Legends—with the use of tabs.[22] Editors on the site began creating new articles reflecting information only relevant to the new system of canon and by October 21 had created over 1000 in-universe canon articles.

In April, Cavalier One was the first user to be voted WOTM for a second time.[14]

2015

Community developments
"Congratulations to Wookieepedia contributors and readers alike
You've made my work so much easier and so much harder.
"
―Leland Chee, on Wookieepedia's 10th year in existence[src]

On March 4, 2015, Wookieepedia celebrated the start of its 10th year. Several individuals with ties to Star Wars media, including Leland Chee and Jason Fry, congratulated the site on its birthday.[23]

Wookieepedia was present at Celebration Anaheim (April 16April 19), where the wiki shared table space with Wikia and hosted a birthday party with a Wookieepedia cake. Afterward, Wikia hosted the Qwizards panel, which allowed fans to compete against long-time Wookieepedians jSarek, Cavalier One, and Jorrel Fraajic.

Content developments

Wikia introduced the Discussions forum feature to Wookieepedia in November, with its first thread being posted on November 12.[24]

On the heels of the 2014 decision to institute a tabbed system for canon and Legends content, Wookieepedia editors decided in December 2015 to begin presenting canon content on primary pages, such that visitors arriving at pages such as "Luke Skywalker" would find content relevant to the new canon continuity rather than Legends material. The new system was instituted shortly before the premiere of the film Star Wars: Episode VII The Force Awakens, assuring that those arriving in search of details of classic elements appearing in the new films would easily find the relevant information.[25][26]

2018

Wookieepedia's Darth Caedus article in Oasis skin, March 2017

WookieeProject Battlefront was set up on July 30, 2018.

2019

WookieeProjects Resistance and Galaxy's Edge were launched on April 9 and September 9, respectively.

2020

Community developments

Zed42 and Spookywilloww were granted rollback in March, while 01miki10 and OOM 224 were granted the tool in November and December, respectively. Exiledjedi resigned from his adminship in May, while AnilSerifoglu resigned from all his positions in October. Master Fredcerique and Zed42 were then elected administrators in the latter half of the year.

In April, Wookieepedia's Discord server was opened up to limited access for Wookieepedians, facilitating communications and furthering collaboration. The server was made official in June.

Wookieepedia's first Star Wars Character of the Year tournament was held, replacing the annual Mister/Miss Star Wars votes. Wookieepedia's first Artist of the Year and Newcomer of the Year votes were also held, with Dave Filoni and Clone Force 99 "The Bad Batch" as winners for the respective competitions.

Content developments

WookieeProjects Mandalore and The Mandalorian were launched on January 29 and February 3, respectively.

Under contruction notice used for Project Stardust's articles

Project Stardust was launched by Master Fredcerique as a collaborative effort to improve articles on essential topics.[27] It was a successful launch, with significant expansions to the Ahsoka Tano[28] and Mustafar articles between May and August.[29]

The backup link project, organized by Shayanomer, NanoLuuke, and Xd1358 among others, provided tens of thousands of archival links throughout the wiki, ensuring that information found online would not be lost. Pages listed in the relevant maintenance category dropped from over 22,000 to a grand total of zero in the course of just over seven months.[30]

On September 2, Wookieepedia surpassed 160,000 articles.

2021

Community developments

The character Boba Fett was crowned the Star Wars Character of the Year for 2020, with runners-up being Din Djarin, Yarael Poof, Frog Lady, and Ahsoka Tano.[31]

JediMasterMacaroni was chosen as the new year's first Wookieepedian of the Month for his outstanding contributions to both the community and the wiki.[32] On January 19, the Padawan editing tutorial was completed by Master Fredcerique, allowing new editors to learn the basics of the editing. The Glossary of Wookieepedian terms saw a major update by Xd1358 on January 31.[33]

Fan-made Wookieepedia logo by Matt Doyle

Hanzo Hasashi was voted in as February's Wookieepedian of the Month for his status article work, becoming a two-time winner for the award.[34] On February 5, Lewisr was awarded the editor of the year in Fandom's Movies/TV wiki category in 2020, as well being recognized for having made the most edits in the same category. Grunny resigned his bureaucratship on February 17. On February 24, VergenceScatter was granted rollback rights by the community.[35] The final Mofference was held on February 27,[36] and Tommy-Macaroni was elected bureaucrat on March 4, coinciding with Wookieepedia's sixteenth anniversary.[37] Wok142 won the Wookieepedian of the Month award in March for his clean-up and anti-vandalism work, as well as article expansions and contributions to Discord discussions.[38]

Immi Thrax was awarded Wookieepedian of the Month for April for her friendly attitude and involvement in community discussions, as well as exemplary work on oft-neglected topics.[39] In the aftermath of March's Consensus Track vote that was nullified by a Fandom decision, bureaucrats Darth Culator and Toprawa and Ralltiir were banned, and Wookieepedia's Facebook account was discontinued.[40]

Later in April, the Knowledge Bank feature on the wiki was retired and replaced by a forum thread on Discussions. In the same month, Plume Tray launched his own bot, PLUMEBOT, and DwartiiDelver was awarded May's Wookieepedian of the Month for quality status article nominations and contributions to discussions. In addition, Master Fredcerique and Xd1358 were elected bureaucrats on May 4, and on May 22, Shayanomer was admitted to the AgriCorps reviewing panel. The Mofference was also retired in favor of the on-site Consensus Track, while the organized real-time spirit of the Mofference was continued through the WookieeNights event, unofficially launched by Supreme Emperor in May and ratified in July.

Plume Tray was awarded Wookieepedian of the Month for June for his botwork with PLUMEBOT and contributions to numerous templates using his technical expertise.[41] The Knight editing tutorial was published on June 3, and Jade Moonstroller and Ajjviolin96 were made Discussions moderators on June 9. On June 12, Commander Code-8 was re-admitted to the EduCorps reviewing panel, and on June 26, OOM 224 was admitted to the AgriCorps reviewing panel. The community vested CheckUser rights to DarthRuiz30 on June 23, and days later, Wookieepedia's Immi Thrax took part in a Fandom Twitch panel themed around Pride that was released on June 28.

Fan-made Wookieepedia logo by Star Wars 5W

On July 1, Jedi Sarith LeKit was elected Wookieepedian of the Month for his contributions to bridging the divide between Discussions and the wiki.[42] That same day, Fandom named Immi Thrax their editor of the month for June in the TV/Movies category of wikis for her contributions to Wookieepedia's LGBTQIA+ coverage. Wookieepedia's Twitter account was verified on July 7, and on July 8, Cade Calrayn launched JocastaBot, a bot designed to handle part of the Comprehensive article, Good article, and Featured article nomination archival process for review panel members.

Newcomer YakovChaimTzvi won Wookieepedian of the Month for August for greatly improving coverage on the Star Wars: The Ascendancy Trilogy novels and other Chiss-related material.[43] The first official WookieeNight was held on August 8. JediMasterMacaroni was admitted to the EduCorps review panel on August 14, while Shayanomer joined the ranks of the Inquisitorius review panel on August 21. Rsand 30‎ received September's Wookieepedian of the Month award,[44] while Dentface received the award for October.[45] On October 9, Tommy-Macaroni resigned from all his positions on the website aside from his Rollback rights.[46] On October 23, OOM 224 joined the Inquisitorius.[47]

The Wookieepedian of the Month for November was LucaRoR.[48] JediMasterMacaroni joined the ranks of the AgriCorps review panel on November 6.[49] JMM won his second Wookieepedian of the Month award on December.[50]

In 2021, Supreme Emperor and Cade Calrayn joined Wookieepedia's Social Media Team.[51] Wookieepedia's Instagram account surpassed 100,000 followers in February, and while the site's Facebook account was discontinued in April, the Wookieepedia Twitter account was officially verified in July. Between June and December, the Twitter account's follower count rose from 32,000 to 57,000, and it garnered a record 3.71 million views in October. In November, there were 14.4 million views of Wookieepedia's tweets, including 47,500 individual interactions of the posts and 4500 clicks on the featured links.

Content developments

On January 17, Project Stardust launched a new effort for articles relating to the Star Wars: The High Republic publishing initiative. On February 28, Wookieepedia surpassed 165,000 articles, and in early September, the wiki surpassed 170,000 articles.

On March 4, the sixteenth anniversary of the site, Tommy-Macaroni's bot, TOM-E Macaron.ii, made the 10,000,000th edit while renaming the {{Eras}} template to {{Top}} per the last Mofference.[52]

Following public outcry, Fandom ruled that all deadnames be removed from Wookieepedia with the exception of redirects in April, and the image debate for the breast/Legends article was settled in May. WookieeProjects Fantasy Flight Games and Star Wars: Card Trader were launched on April 2 and April 22, respectively.

Fan-made Wookieepedia logo by Liam Brazier

In June, Project Stardust and WookieeProject Pride—the latter having been launched by Immi Thrax in April—partnered to work on the Chelli Lona Aphra article. The FandomDesktop skin was also added to Wookieepedia in June, changing the site's appearance—including the default background, font, and layout—as well as introducing dark mode. In August, Project Stardust turned its focus to improving the canon Qui-Gon Jinn article. That same month, Fandom's branding was relaunched with a new logo and color palette.

On August 26, Supreme Emperor launched the Wookieepedia YouTube channel to produce audio versions of status articles. On August 31, Supreme Emperor hosted the first ever Wookieepedia video interview with Sean Kiner, Dean Kiner, and surprise guest Kevin Kiner. The video was uploaded to the Wookieepedia YouTube channel the following day, here.

On September 5, Project Stardust shifted its focus to the Battle of Hoth article. On November 3, the project turned to the Kamino article, and on December 2, the project moved on to the Boba Fett article. On December 5, WookieeProject Creators was founded by Jade Moonstroller, with a focus on real-world people who have contributed to Star Wars.[53]

In total, 25 Featured articles were passed in 2021, in addition to 281 Good articles and 916 Comprehensive articles.[54]

2022

Community developments
Fan-made Wookieepedia logo by Punch It Chewie Press

The character Chewbacca was crowned the Star Wars Character of the Year for 2021, with runners-up being Fennec Shand, Yarael Poof, Chelli Lona Aphra, Mitth'raw'nuruodo, and Geode.[55] NBDani was voted Wookieepedian of the Month for January 2022,[56] and Discussions moderator Givinname was voted February's Wookieepedian of the Month.[57] On the review panels, Commander Code-8 was admitted to the AgriCorps on January 15,[58] Manoof joined the EduCorps on February 13,[59] and JediMasterMacaroni was voted into the Inquisitorius on February 26.[60] Loqiical was voted March's Wookieepedian of the Month.[61]

Launching the month of April, MegaZeph was awarded the honor of being Wookieepedian of the Month.[62] LucaRoR was admitted to the EduCorps on April 17,[63] and Commander Code-8 joined the Inquisitorius on April 30.[64]

For May, Samonic became the Wookieepedian of the Month,[65] and the new review board recruitment process was implemented.[66]

Content developments

In January, Project Stardust began working on the Fennec Shand article in conjunction with the Boba Fett article.[67] On January 25, YakovChaimTzvi founded WookieeProject Chiss, focusing on article subjects related to the Chiss species.[68] Erebus Chronus founded WookieeProject Durge's Lance, focusing on subjects related to the Confederacy of Independent Systems, on February 4.[69] NanoLuuke founded WookieeProject Web to coordinate Wookieepedia's use of web content on March 9.[70] WookieeProject LEGO was founded by DFaceG on April 12 to coordinate Wookieepedia's coverage of LEGO Star Wars content.[71]

The 175,000th article to be created, Kybuck (disambiguation), saw the light of day on April 27.

Multi-year phenomena

Fan-made Wookieepedia logo by Tamar J. Canady

Over the course of the wiki's history, several attempts were made to curb fanon on user pages or delete it altogether. Most votes resulted in no consensus and the issue was pushed back until a few months later when it became known again. A major influence became the creation of the Star Wars Fanon Wiki, which was accepting of all forms of fanon written by its users. Most users to that wiki happened to be Wookieepedians as well, but not in the form of long-staying administrators, but rather those who had been told not to add fanon to Wookieepedia. This shift of population was seen as general amounts of fanon reduced, but there were still users that went ahead with filling in their user pages and then not editing any or even a few articles. This however did not limit the number of true contributors to Wookieepedia.

From 2005 to 2019, an annual contest for Miss Star Wars and Mister Star Wars had been held in December, with voting up to the new year. The winners, either male or female Star Wars characters, retain their crowns until the next vote and can continue to win as long as they receive enough support. The contests were then made into one, with Boba Fett becoming champion of Wookieepedia's Star Wars Character of the Year 2020 contest.

From 2005 to 2008, several Wookieepedians contributed to Star Wars canon via the What's The Story? feature of StarWars.com, including John Hazlett, Tim Veekhoven, Aidan Hennessy, Nathan O'Keefe, Gregory Walker, Kyle Jewhurst, Timothy S. Maddocks, and Arthur Papadam.

Statistics

Wookieepedia's growth from March 2005 to April 2022

There are 50,234 articles on Wookieepedia, and of these, −1 are considered Featured articles (-0.002% of the total), −2 Good articles (-0.004%), and −3 Comprehensive articles (-0.006%). There are 0 active users (Users who have performed any action in the last 30 days).[72]

As of September 2021, according to Alexa Internet, Fandom's three-month global Alexa traffic rank is 80.[73] In April 2014, 1.84% of all Fandom visitors accessed the Wookieepedia subdomain.[74] It is the seventh largest Fandom-hosted wiki in terms of article count.[75]

Growth

Wookieepedia has grown quickly from its start in March 2005 to present to reach 50,234 articles. One relatively large spike in contributions occurred in August 2005, after the release of Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith.[15] Wookieepedia crossed the 50,000 article threshold on June 26, 2007,[76] the 75,000 article threshold on April 1, 2010[77] the 100,000 article threshold on January 10, 2013,[78] and the 150,000 article threshold on July 6, 2019.

Article milestones

WookieeProjects

Since 2006, Wookieepedia has been host to many collaborative projects which have improved related groups of articles, either by subject or by source, to Featured article, Good article, and Comprehensive article status. Barn Burners (2011–2014) and Project Stardust (2020–) were set up in the Senate Hall as wiki-wide improvement drives that periodically shift their focus on a variety of topics.

Popular acclaim

"Wookieepedia is a fabulous resource. Love it and use it a lot. But it's always a starting [point] for further verification, not an endpoint."
Jason Fry[src]
A comparison chart of Wikia projects (Wookieepedia in red)

2005–2008

  • Wookieepedia was mentioned in Time magazine on May 29, 2005 as one of Wikia's largest wikis; only Star Trek's Memory Alpha was larger, though by November 12, 2005, Wookieepedia had exceeded Memory Alpha in legitimate number of articles. However shortly thereafter, Wookieepedia was overtaken by World of Warcraft's WoWwiki.
  • On September 26, 2005, Jimmy Wales, the founder of Wikipedia, mentioned Wookieepedia in an interview on C-SPAN.
  • Abel G. Peña mentioned Wookieepedia in his October 11, 2005 blog, calling it a "staggering enterprise."[81]
  • Nathan Butler mentioned and gave his support to the wiki in an episode of his ChronoRadio internet radio show.
  • SciFi.com selected Wookieepedia as its Sci Fi Site of the Week on November 28, 2005.[82]
  • TheForce.net acknowledged Wookieepedia for the first time on December 2, 2005, comparing it with The Completely Unofficial Star Wars Encyclopedia.[83]
  • On March 27, 2006, Wookieepedia was mentioned in the official Wikia press release covering the relaunch of Wikicities under the new name Wikia.
  • Daniel Wallace puts Wookieepedia links in his blog.[84] He also admitted being a "giant fan of Wookieepedia."[85]
  • John Jackson Miller mentioned Wookieepedia in behind-the-scenes comments for Knights of the Old Republic 6 as the source of the conjectural name "Padawan Massacre of Taris," which was later canonized in issue 11 of that same series.[86] Also, he dedicated a blog post called "On Wikis and Wookiees" to it.[87]
  • On September 4, 2006, Wookieepedia was mentioned in the New York Times.[88]
  • In Matt and Ben Loewen's audio commentary for Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope, done as an episode of their fan audio show Star Wars FM, they cite Wookieepedia as where they looked for information on the retconned appearance of the 501st in the film. In reference to the site's name, Matt quips, "I love that name!"
  • Pablo Hidalgo mentioned Wookieepedia in one of his blog entries. He stated "…there's a variety of reasons I can't go into that playground as someone on the official side of things. I try to avoid it, though from what I've seen it's pretty darn impressive."[89]
  • In an interview with comedian C.C. Banana regarding the 30th anniversary of Star Wars, Peter Mayhew was asked if he contributed to the site, and replied that while he hadn't, "I do click onto it every now and again."[90]
  • In an NBC blog, Aaron Bleyaert wrote about Wookieepedia's quick response to changing Motti's name to the disputed but canon name Conan Antonio Motti. In the blog, released a day after George Lucas's statement, he praised Wookieepedia for their quickness in incorporating it into the Star Wars mythology.[91]
  • On May 4, 2007, Variety.com wrote an article on Wookieepedia.[92] The article was later included on Hyperspace[93] and the starwars.com Homing Beacon #187—making this the first time the official site has recognized the existence of Wookieepedia.
Wookieepedia and CUSWE's banner at Celebration IV
  • On May 8, 2007, JoBlo.com posted a small article on Wookieepedia. As of its posting, the wiki had 47,916 articles.[94]
  • On May 18, 2007, StarWars.com again mentioned Wookieepedia in the Behind-the-Scenes Stage Programming" section of its article "Insider's Guide to Celebration IV: Part III."[95] Wookieepedia was later mentioned in the printed form of the guide available at the event.
  • Wookieepedia was allotted time on the "Behind the Scenes" stage during Celebration IV for a trivia game set up by members of the Wookieepedia community.
  • In the June 2007 issue of Reason magazine, an article about Jimmy Wales discussed the Star Wars wikia community as one of the largest wikis.[96]
  • On the June 19, 2007 episode of his radio show, Howard Stern—an influential radio shock jock—mentioned Wookieepedia, and proceeded to read from the Wookieepedia entry on Darth Nihilus.[97]
  • In Issue #121 of ToyFare magazine, the "Twisted Toyfare Theater" section is devoted exclusively to The Star Wars Holiday Special, with Lumpy questioning Chewbacca about Life Day, and Chewbacca responding that he should look it up on Wookieepedia.[98]
  • TimesOnline mentioned Wookieepedia as being one of the best Wikipedia spinoffs and referred to its "regularly amusing Quotes of the Day."[99]
  • RiffTrax's Kevin Murphy worked a Wookieepedia reference into their commentary for The Star Wars Holiday Special.[100]
  • Wookieepedia was mentioned in StarWars.com's February 12, 2008 Photo Caption.[101]
  • After the third anniversary of Wookieepedia, on March 5, 2008, Galactic Watercooler blogged about the site, claiming it possessed the "best wiki name ever."[102]
  • The Official Star Wars Blog mentioned Wookieepedia's April 1, 2008 joke.[103]
  • Wookieepedia was mentioned in Daniel Wallace's article "The Essential Expanded Universe" in Star Wars Insider 101.[104]
  • Dave Filoni mentioned on the Official Star Wars Blog, among other topics, that George Lucas was shown printed Wookieepedia articles when discussing material he was unaware of.[105]
  • On October 3, 2008, Associated Content.com (now Yahoo! Voices) posted an article on Wookieepedia, stating that it contained "so much minutiae that if Wookieepedia were an actual Star Wars convention the geek quotient would suffocate the average person."[106]
  • Pablo Hidalgo mentioned Wookieepedia in the article about Star Wars: The Clone Wars: Lightsaber Duels game published on StarWars.com. When mentioning "speculative" matches from the game that may or may not fit into continuity, he gave an example of Obi-Wan Kenobi dueling Dooku while Anakin was attacking the Malevolence and commented, "Good luck working that one out, Wookieepedians."[107]
  • A number of images (from various media) on Wookieepedia were included in The Complete Star Wars Encyclopedia. Some entries on subjects that received passing mentions in their original source were copied almost directly from Wookieepedia's articles on the subject. Samples include Jumerian and Kallil-virus. Assumptions that existed in these articles, present because they were created as early as 2006, thus became canonical.

2009–2013

  • The 106th issue of Star Wars Insider, published in January 2009, included an article about the development of The Complete Star Wars Encyclopedia in its Blaster department. It acknowledged that such an encyclopedia was forced to compete with Wookieepedia, just as general encyclopedias must compete with Wikipedia. A sidebar in the same article, entitled "Sizing Up Star Wars," featured Stephen J. Sansweet stating, "From what I've seen, Wookieepedia is a superbly-run resource and the community does a wonderful job of policing and self-editing. And that's partly because of the kind of people that make up Star Wars fandom."[108]
  • In a interview with Craig Titley, the script writer for the Clone Wars episode Blue Shadow Virus, Wookieepedia was mentioned as one of the sites Titley was thrilled to see his name on in connection with Star Wars (the other being the Official Site).[109]
  • On March 6, 2009, senior environment artist Alex Thomas mentioned in the BioWare Blog post on the Star Wars: The Old Republic website that Wookieepedia used an early screenshot for Nal Hutta in the game as the article's only depiction of the planet surface so far, given its previously unexplored status.[110]
  • On April 2, 2009, The A.V. Club's Scott Tobias used the Wookieepedia for research on tauntauns in an article about a ThinkGeek April Fool's joke.[111]
  • Author Maya Kaathryn Bohnhoff described Wookieepedia as a great place to begin researching things while writing her novel Shadow Games, before redirecting her research to a proper guide or expert. She has additionally mentioned Wookieepedia in several blog entries.[112][113]
  • The acknowledgments of The Essential Atlas included several names of Wookieepedians that helped out the authors.[114]
  • On October 8, 2009, Game Informer published an interview with the keeper of Lucasfilm's Holocron continuity database, Leland Chee, in which Chee mentioned Wookieepedia as a resource occasionally used by game developers.[115]
  • On January 2010, Southeastern Louisiana University physicist Rhett Allain used information from Wookieepedia (R2-D2's height) to argue that R2 would weigh less than styrofoam in reality (100 grams). The article's numbers are now outdated with the release of Star Wars: Head-to-Head Tag Teams, which states R2's mass to be 32 kilograms.[116]
  • Author Paul S. Kemp has admitted to reading Wookieepedia, albeit with some caution, while writing his 2010 novel Crosscurrent.[117]
The lower columns display text taken directly from the Dreadnaught cruiser Wookieepedia article.
Wookieepedia is mentioned as a source on Mythbusters' Star Wars special.

2014–Present

  • On Mythbusters' Star Wars special "Revenge of the Myth," which aired January 4, 2014, Wookieepedia is mentioned by Adam Savage as a source for the temperature on Hoth in determining the survivability inside a tauntaun.[141]
  • During a period of concern about canon following the announcement of a "Story Group," Observation Deck posted an article on the situation, with a header image of Wookieepedia and The Completely Unofficial Star Wars Encyclopedia's logos from a banner used at Celebration IV.[142]
  • On February 28, 2014, Dorkly released a comic featuring the eight types of Star Wars fans; one of the eight types was "Wookieepedia Editors," a subset of "Extended Canon-ites." Wookieepedia editors were represented by an Emperor Palpatine figure advertising Yuuzhan Vong trivia at his bar that no one would attend and a fan debating with himself on which member of the Figrin D'an and the Modal Nodes was his favorite.[143]
  • On August 8, 2014, io9 mentioned "Wookiepedia" in regards to a "crisis" involving the various calendars of Star Wars after the creation of Legends materials and Leland Chee's involvement in clarifying these now defunct calendars on Twitter.[144]
Chris Hardwick and his "hype nerd" recite from Wookieepedia.
  • On October 1, 2014, @midnight, hosted by Chris Hardwick and with guests Thomas Lennon, Cameron Esposito, and Daniel Sloss, used Wookieepedia in a game titled "NPR Anchor or Minor Star Wars Character." When referring to "the online Star Wars encyclopedia known as Wookieepedia," Hardwick states to the crowd "that's 100% true." In the game, Hardwick asks his contestants whether the names Jad Abumrad, Mas Amedda, and Jian Ghomeshi are NPR anchors or minor Star Wars characters, with Mas Amedda being the only character. Upon reveal, Hardwick displays an image of Amedda from his Wookieepedia article with the Wikia skin present. Hardwick follows this by then viewing Amedda as an NPR anchor wearing an "I love Shelter Cats" sweater. Hardwick also proceeds to view the NPR anchors as Star Wars characters, with Abumrad as C-3PO and Ghomeshi as Emperor Palpatine respectively.[145][146]
  • On December 1, 2014, after the release of the first teaser trailer for Star Wars: Episode VII The Force Awakens, @midnight once again featured Wookieepedia to explain to fanboys upset with John Boyega apparently as a black stormtrooper that stormtroopers were no longer clones by the time of the new film. This episode with Tom Papa, Dave Hill, and Morgan Murphy involved displaying a version of Wookieepedia's stormtrooper article, with Chris Hardwick and his "hype nerd" reading various lines from the article. Emphasis was given to certain clips of information, particularly in how Jango Fett's clones were marginalized. It should be noted that the article in question was the Legends stormtrooper article.[147][148]
  • On December 29, 2014, journalist Steve Haruch linked to several Wookieepedia articles for an NPR article on the actor who played Telsij and other Asian characters in the Star Wars universe, namely Ardon Crell, Rayc Ryjerd, Corman Jeihn, Bana Breemu, and Bultar Swan, as well as the Holocron continuity database managed by Leland Chee. Jan Solbidder and Selig Kenjenn were other names mentioned but were not linked.[149]
  • On April 14, 2015, YouTube personalities Rhett and Link posted a video on their Good Mythical More channel that discussed "what if" scenarios. At one point, the topic turns to Star Wars science, and Link states "where there's whole Star Wars Wikipedias.. Wiki... whatever, the Wookieepedia, where like people have talked about the gravitational pull on every planet, and all this data exists, and I think that's awesome."[150]
  • On April 16, 2015, on the first day of Celebration Anaheim, StarWars.com has an interview with Leland Chee and Pablo Hidalgo about the Star Wars universe, and Wookieepedia is mentioned twice by the interviewer.[151]
  • On April 17, 2015, during Celebration Anaheim, Wookieepedia was the focus of an Forbes article by Zack O'Malley Greenburg about Star Wars fandom and the wiki.[152]
  • On April 20, 2015, Wookieepedia was further mentioned by Greenburg in a summary of Celebration Anaheim.[153]
  • On April 22, 2015, after the release of the second teaser trailer, Wookieepedia was mentioned in an article by the London Evening Standard discussing the anticipation of Star Wars: Episode VII The Force Awakens. Author William Moore recommended readers "brush up" on Wookieepedia, and did indicate that "yes, it's a real website."[154]
  • On April 23, 2015, an article by Entertainment Weekly's Anthony Breznican linked to Wookieepedia's article on Anakin Skywalker's second lightsaber as it may have made an appearance in Star Wars: Episode VII The Force Awakens.[155]
  • On May 4, 2015, Wookieepedia and the new Star Wars canon were the focus of a Tech Times article by Steven Schneider.[156]
  • On May 17, 2015, Wookieepedia was mentioned in an article by Alaska Dispatch News' Alex DeMarban about Alaskan native Mary Franklin.[157]
  • The November 14, 2015 podcast of The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe mentioned Wookieepedia in its opening minute in regards to preparing for the release of The Force Awakens.[158]
  • On November 17, 2015, Wookieepedia was visually referenced in Screen Junkies' Honest Trailer for Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope, though "Wikipedia" may have been audibly cited.[159]
  • As part of AV Club's Star Wars Week in November 2015, Wookieepedia is linked to in discussion of Mara Jade Skywalker in an article on excisions from Star Wars canon.[160]
Cracked's Daniel O' Brian highlights the Legends version of the Ewok article.
  • In the AV Club article "If you could change one thing about Star Wars, what would it be?," contributing author and Editor-in-Chief John Teti refers directly to Wookieepedia when looking for specific information on how holochess differed from dejarik, noting "Wookieepedia insists that holochess 'differed on crucial points from dejarik' without feeling the need to mention what any of those crucial points might be." The information was cited directly from The Complete Star Wars Encyclopedia's entry on holochess and as of the article's publication has not been expanded upon.[161]
  • On December 1, 2015, Zachary Feinstein of Washington University published an essay on the cost of destroying the Death Stars and the financial fallout and cited Wookieepedia on three occasions.[162] This essay was picked up by several news vendors including Popular Science, where contributor Kelsey D. Atherton mentioned "Wookiepedia" as a source.[163]
  • Also on December 1, Buzzfeed's Joseph Bernstein and Charlie Warzel referred to "Wookiepedia" when defining the term "jizz" in their article.[164]
  • In early December 2015, About.com's Star Wars Expert, Robin Parrish, wrote about "How Wookieepedia Conquered Star Wars Fandom."[165]
  • On December 23, 2015, Katherine Cusumano wrote for Forbes about how Wookieepedia has seen a massive increase in traffic from the release of The Force Awakens.[166]
  • Also on December 23, 2015, Nelson Granados referenced Wookieepedia's traffic increase in another Forbes article about how The Force Awakens was driving traffic across the web.[167]
  • On December 31, 2015, Collider.com's Dave Trumbore pointed to Wookieepedia as a source of background character information regarding cameos in The Force Awakens.[168]
  • On January 18, 2016, Cracked.com's Obsessive Pop Culture Disorder, hosted by Daniel O'Brian, covered Ewoks and the dark secret behind them as vicious man-eating monsters. When citing their usage of poison-tipped arrows, the video directly cites Wookieepedia as a "thoroughly researched database" and references the Legends tab of the Ewok article. The video highlights text within the Weapons and Equipment section, attributed to Jason Fry's The Essential Guide to Warfare. The screen grab was made when Wookieepedia's article count registered 124,788.[169]
  • Star Wars: The Force Awakens costume designer Michael Kaplan namedropped Wookieepedia in an interview with Clothes On Film just before Christmas 2015: "The fact that I didn't have total recall of the [original] films... isn't that what Wookiepedia [sic] is for?"[170]
  • In Switzerland, a research team from École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne used Wookieepedia as their primary source to conduct a study on the size and scope of the Legends continuity.[171]
  • In the feature "Jyn, the Rebel" featured on the digital release of Rogue One, Felicity Jones stated that she researched Wookieepedia to better prepare for her role as Jyn Erso.[172]
  • Ben Blacker mentioned Wookieepedia in a May 9, 2017 StarWars.com article regarding Join the Resistance.[173]
  • Jon Kasdan mentioned in a 2018 interview that he used Wookieepedia to aid in writing Solo: A Star Wars Story.[174] It was also revealed that the writers and directors researched Wookieepedia for spaceports on Corellia, where they found the name of "Coronet Spaceport" and decided to use it for the film.[175]
  • In an interview with The Big Event podcast, Alden Ehrenreich talked about research for his role as Han Solo, and mentioned that he read articles on Wookieepedia to prepare and gain a larger understanding.[176]

Criticism

Like all wikis, Wookieepedia has been criticized for common wiki flaws such as pushing a certain point of view and for its easily editable nature, leading to frequent vandalism. A question on the TFN Boards in 2008 asked whether the wiki continued to be reliable, to which jSarek replied, "To a degree. We generally keep the nonsense out, but we're not perfect, and sometimes something slips through."[177] Vandalism can easily distort canonical information if not checked; however, with Wookieepedia being one of the most active wikis, vandalism going unnoticed is rare. Fandom released an apology to Newsweek after racist edits were noticed by fans visiting Rose Tico's page.[178]

Influences on canon

This in-universe list is incomplete. You can help Wookieepedia by expanding it.

In other languages

In addition to Wookieepedia, several other Star Wars wikis exist in multiple languages. These different language encyclopedias were started and are currently run by different people.

Spin-offs

Several wikis have been spawned from Wookieepedia. These include the Star Wars Fanon Wiki, the Star Wars Games Wiki, the LEGO Star Wars Wiki, the Star Wars Fanpedia, the Star Wars Galaxies Wiki, the Clone Wars Wiki, the Clone Wars Adventures Wiki, the Star Wars: The Old Republic Wiki, and the Star Wars Rebels Wiki.

In addition, the site wookieepedia.org appears to be written entirely in Shyriiwook.

Notes and references

  1. Wikipedia:About on Wikipedia
  2. 2.0 2.1 See Wikipedia:What Wikipedia is not on Wikipedia, Wikipedia:Notability on Wikipedia and Wikipedia:Fancruft on Wikipedia
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Talk:Star Wars/Archive 1#Star Wars Wiki (was Wikipedia Portal: StarWars ?) on Wikipedia
  4. User contributions for Cbarbry on Wikipedia
  5. User contributions for Riffsyphon1024 on Wikipedia
  6. Riffsyphon1024's recollection of events
  7. Difference between revisions of "Talk:Star Wars" on Wikipedia
  8. 8.0 8.1 Chad Barbry's user page on Wookieepedia
  9. Riffsyphon1024's first edits
  10. All public logs on Wookieepedia
  11. Special:Contributions/AlexTheMartian AlexTheMartian's edits
  12. Riffsyphon1024's Archive 1
  13. The term "Great LucasCruft Purge" stemmed from the VfD for Great Jedi Purge and was co-coined by Greenwood and Kappa.
  14. 14.0 14.1 Wookieepedia:Wookieepedian of the Month/History
  15. 15.0 15.1 Wikistats on wikistats.wikia.com published by Wikia (content obsolete and backup link not available)
  16. Wookieepedia:Requests for user rights/RFA archive on Wookieepedia
  17. User rights on Wookieepedia
  18. AL-BRT edit count
  19. As noted per Interview request with Christian Gossett in August 2008, located at Wookieepedia:Interview/Christian Gossett.
  20. 20.0 20.1 Star Wars Celebration VI (2012-09-11) on dorknight.libsyn.com published by The Dork Night Podcast (archived from the original on March 26, 2016)
  21. Forum:CT:Legends and Canon coverage
  22. Forum:CT:Tab system
  23. Leland Chee (@HolocronKeeper) on Twitter: "@WookOfficial Congratulations to Wookieepedia contributors and readers alike You've made my work so much easier and so much harder." (backup link)
  24. Are you going to see The Force Awakens on opening weekend? on Wookieepedia
  25. Wookieepedia Consensus Track - Canon/Legends Default Switch
  26. Mofference - December 7, 2015
  27. Forum:SH:Project Stardust on Wookieepedia
  28. Difference between revisions of "Ahsoka Tano" on Wookieepedia
  29. Difference between revisions of "Mustafar" on Wookieepedia
  30. Wars Character of the Year 2020 Star Wars Character of the Year on Wookieepedia
  31. Wookieepedia:Wookieepedian of the Month/January 2021 on Wookieepedia
  32. Difference between revisions of "Wookieepedia:Glossary" on Wookieepedia
  33. Wookieepedia:Wookieepedian of the Month/February 2021 on Wookieepedia
  34. Wookieepedia:Requests for user rights/RFR archive/VergenceScatter on Wookieepedia
  35. 27, 2021 Wookieepedia:Mofferences/February 27, 2021 on Wookieepedia
  36. Wookieepedia:Requests for user rights/RFB archive/Tommy-Macaroni on Wookieepedia
  37. Wookieepedia:Wookieepedian of the Month/March 2021 on Wookieepedia
  38. Wookieepedia:Wookieepedian of the Month/April 2021 on Wookieepedia
  39. on the banning of Darth Culator & Toprawa and Ralltiir Forum:SH:Statement on the banning of Darth Culator & Toprawa and Ralltiir on Wookieepedia
  40. Wookieepedia:Wookieepedian of the Month/June 2021 on Wookieepedia
  41. Wookieepedia:Wookieepedian of the Month/July 2021 on Wookieepedia
  42. Wookieepedia:Wookieepedian of the Month/August 2021 on Wookieepedia
  43. Wookieepedia:Wookieepedian of the Month/September 2021 on Wookieepedia
  44. Wookieepedia:Wookieepedian of the Month/October 2021 on Wookieepedia
  45. Forum:NB:Tommy-Macaroni's resignation on Wookieepedia
  46. Wookieepedia:Inq/Meeting 131 on Wookieepedia
  47. Wookieepedia:Wookieepedian of the Month/November 2021 on Wookieepedia
  48. Wookieepedia:AC/Meeting 145 on Wookieepedia
  49. Wookieepedia:Wookieepedian of the Month/December 2021 on Wookieepedia
  50. Revision history of "Template:Newcomers3" on Wookieepedia
  51. Kamen Proy on Wookieepedia
  52. Wookieepedia:WookieeProject Creators on Wookieepedia
  53. User:JocastaBot/Rankings/2021 on Wookieepedia
  54. Wars Character of the Year 2021 Star Wars Character of the Year 2021 on Wookieepedia
  55. Wookieepedia:Wookieepedian of the Month/January 2022 on Wookieepedia
  56. Wookieepedia:Wookieepedian of the Month/February 2022 on Wookieepedia
  57. Wookieepedia:AC/Meeting 147 on Wookieepedia
  58. Wookieepedia:EduCorps/Meeting_87 on Wookieepedia
  59. Wookieepedia:Inq/Meeting 135 on Wookieepedia
  60. Wookieepedia:Wookieepedian of the Month/March 2022 on Wookieepedia
  61. Wookieepedia:Wookieepedian of the Month/April 2022 on Wookieepedia
  62. Wookieepedia:EduCorps/Meeting 89 on Wookieepedia
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  76. 75,000 Pool
  77. 100,000 Pool
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  113. The Essential Atlas
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  120. Good News Week - Clash Of The Titans Simon Pegg Nick Frost on the Brad Hawkes YouTube channel (backup link)
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  158. Whatever happened to Mara Jade?: 12 unfortunate excisions from the Star Wars canon (2015-11-18) on avclub.com published by AV Club (archived from the original on December 9, 2019)
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  174. The Big Event:Alden Ehrenreich interview (2018-05-04) on thebigevent.sfchronicle.libsynpro.com published by The Big Event (archived from the original on December 19, 2019)
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  178. Non-Canon Ref

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