Topic on Talk:Wyatt Quitter

From Blaseball Wiki

As a Lift fan active on Lift wiki pages, I'm seconding the concerns many have brought up about this addition seeming to be in bad faith. This is the second time you have tried to add this information to the wiki and you have fixed none of the errors despite having a second chance to catch them. The sporadic capitalization of names in the list of Quitter's proposed relationships makes this seem like an almost intentionally low-effort edit, it's hard to believe someone who earnestly wants to contribute to a page would fail to catch the errors after the second time typing these names out.

Most of the information you suggest adding to the Community Reports section does not belong there. If you are still planning on using the same formatting you implemented a month ago, it is very unwieldy, without adding much of note. The long rambling list of "likes" doesn't illuminate anything about Quitter's personality or character in a meaningful way and could be cut out entirely. It can be assumed that under most circumstances, people like their partners. Quitter plays blaseball, though I suppose it's less of a given that people enjoy playing in a blood sport. Being fit and being sexy obviously fit into your subjective comments about finding art of Quitter sexy, and I think you'll be hard-pressed to find anyone who doesn't like having fun, as that's kind of inherent to the whole concept of, well, having fun. Additionally, the distinction of Quitter's proposed relationships (many of which have already had objections raised by other teams) as "boyfriend," "girlfriend," and "partners" is frankly perplexing, and raises questions as to what metric you've used to distinguish them.

I do think that explicitly noting Quitter's ethnicity would be great for a future edit, but as I feel uncomfortable with so much about this proposed update, I'd personally rather save that addition for the future when it's not tied to all these other changes, and hopefully integrate it into the entry in a more thoughtful way than tacked onto the end of the page in a trivia section.