Thread:Wellsworth96/@comment-36180144-20190904043135

Ok. I've held my tongue as you've seemed to follow some people (including me) around "correcting" some things that are purely subjective. Some actual corrections, which are great, and some serious "tomato, tomahto" stuff like surmised vs assumed. Fine. In the end it doesn't matter whose exact wording "wins" - the important thing is getting a solid account of the show out there. The great thing about wikis is that we're all (supposedly) on the same team, trying to make things better.

What doesn't help with that, however, is being rude to each other in comments. Including editing comments. This time it was to me: "Please speak English when you revert not gibberish." Which could use a comma between revert and not, ironically, considering it's griping about improper English, but let's let that slide.

The salient point there: We all walk a line in edit-comments between being concise, vs thoroughly explaining what we did to fellow editors. If you have a problem with a fellow wiki editor's style or use of fairly common internet abbreviations, please be forthright and bring it up to them, as I am doing here. Don't simply snark backhandedly in comments, leading us to wonder what you're grousing about.

I'm not the first to whom you've been rude. In the last week alone, there was "The reacter [sic] is NOT in the basement of the Palace. You'd know this if you paid attention." - which I surmise/assume was directed at WarGrowlmon18, since I think he made that edit. No need for the "if you'd paid attention" since we're equals, even colleagues. If you are so frustrated in your life that you feel the need to denigrate people who have the same goal as you... IDK, please pet a fluffy animal of your choice, or take up a relaxing hobby or sport, or work out your aggression in a game where smacktalk is celebrated. To be needlessly hostile in a place like this is to turn a nice community toxic. Please think about your words and use them more carefully. Or at least be open & honest if you're going to be confrontational. Doesn't seem too much to ask, considering this is supposed to be a community where "assume good faith" is a keystone policy.

Cheers. 