Talk:Demoscene

List of Groups
Perhaps the list of groups should be cut down only to notable groups that people would know, like FairLight? Wikipedia is not a web directory or advertising platform. To that length, listing demoparties or demoshows like Pilgrimage should also be considered to be removed; instead, a link to an updated list such as that at Ojuice would be a better fit for Wikipedia.


 * No one is going to agree who is "notable" or not, and will result in some sort of flamewar. Alternately we should consider creating a wikipedia page explicitly for demo groups or refer to the demo groups category page. -- RaD Man


 * Indenting and signing your name on the Talk page rather than re-editing your original paragraph is helpful so I know who I am speaking with. I will reiterate that I believe this Wikipedia entry has outgrown itself and should be broken up into fragmented pages (such as demoscene, demo groups, demo parties).  As for the Pilgrimage Demo Party, it is a fully qualified and active demoparty -- certainly not something to be confused with a short-run demoshow.  Whereever the demoparties are listed on Wikipedia, it will belong. -- RaD Man

Also, PLEASE at least try to have a clue what you're saying. It has NEVER been 'Fair Light' and the L is not capitalized.


 * This list of Demoscene groups is just that, and I'm beginning to feel it's overcrowding the point of the article. Is anyone in favor of splitting this off into a seperate article of sorts?  Radman1 22:42, 26 Oct 2004 (UTC)
 * Aye. Would be nice indeed. // Gargaj 12:10, 27 Oct 2004 (UTC)
 * Maybe it would be worthwhile mentioning some of the historically significant demo groups like the Future Crew, Triton and Fairlight? Mattlach 00:07, 7 October 2005 (UTC)

Just a thought, but maybe one should look for demos already added like Second Reality and list them just like the groups... Rad? :D  --Gargaj 13:17, 26 Oct 2004 (UTC)


 * This entire article should be deleted. It has no relevance in the real world of computing or software.  From what I gather, this is some "hipster" cult of amateur programmers.  How is that relevant to anything?  But hey - what do I know?  I'm just a software engineer and programmer who was cranking out Apple and C64 games in the early '80s, and I still make a living writing and publishing software today.  Just ignore me.  These people must be important.  To someone. Somehow. 98.194.39.86 (talk) 03:20, 24 March 2017 (UTC)

Europe vs. USA vs. Asia
My impression as an outsider is that the demoscene is a largely European phenomenon. If this is true, it should probably be mentioned in the article. I don't think one hears much about demos in the US. And I really wouldn't know about Asia. Some sort of information on geography would make this a more informative article for those readers unfamiliar with the scene. Gwimpey 01:51, Feb 3, 2005 (UTC)
 * This is mostly correct. Historically there have been several Russian demoparties and there is an even an active Japanese demoparty which recently took place just last month (but it is only a virtual party by way of the 2ch BBS website).  Throughout the United States/Canada there has been at least 11 documented physical demoparties ever, a small number in stark contrast to the approximately 70 demoparties which take place each year throughout all of Europe.    -- RaD Man

Intro
I'm have a degree in computer science and I still had a hard time reading this article. First off, although I know what a crack is, the average person doesn't and it's not really explained anywhere. Secondly, cracking software was an issue in the 70's? I'm a youngin but I thought it was very much a non issue before the internet. Especially because without validation being an issue, all the computers can just use the same key and noone will ever know. If no one beats me to it I'll add this to my todo list and clean it up a bit.

Also, is demoscene pronounced as two different words? if so shouldn't it be hyphenated, and if not, how do you pronounce it? Vicarious 01:52, 29 September 2005 (UTC)


 * * Cracking obviously was an issue because there were various ways to "stick" the program to the disk by using the characteristics of the disks. It wasn't really about keys - not many games asked for keys - but more about cracking the actual copy-protection so the swapper was able to actually spread the game. Demoscene is usually written as one word, though some (as far as i noticed mostly in the U.S.) prefer writing it as "demo scene". I think "Demoscene" is the way the subculture prefers to be known as. // Gargaj 15:03, 29 September 2005 (UTC)


 * * Reference should be added for this quote: "Quite a few of the young talents that spent their time coding demos and thus gaining in-depth experience programming computer graphics later ended up working in the games industry, whose products they had initially cracked". It sounds like advertising to me, maybe it is possible to find a reference for this? 83.233.228.36 13:19, 10 July 2007 (UTC)


 * * Though the origin of the demoscene was snippets of flashy intros displaying who cracked whatever game in the mid 80's, I doubt that most demosceners ending up in the game business had cracked games. If there were 1000 people that cracked and distributed games, there were at least an order of magnitude more that made demos. But of course in some cases the statement about crackers ending up as games programmers is true.
 * And I'd say that cracking was a bigger issue in the early years, before the cd-rom came than today, the peer to peer network was about as wide as today, but consisted of real peers (as in teenagers) and it was easier to distribute tapes with 10 or 50 8-bit games or disks with 2-3 16-bit games on than to download, burn and install the games today. 81.227.1.122 04:23, 2 November 2007 (UTC)

Demo Types
I just reworked the demo types section a little bit. I took out kilodemo; I'd never heard it before and Pouet returned one title.. I could've just as well added gigademo. I added a bunch of -tro's. I left "storydemo" and "ravedemo" for now.. but I doubt those two terms have been used much since 1994 or so, when the genres became more common. Anyone else think they should go?

Actually, now that I think about it, should this whole section be moved to Demo (computer programming)? --Vossanova 22:47, 25 October 2005 (UTC)


 * Great rewrite! I'm not sure whether it should be moved to Demo (computer programming), although they should probably either be kept up-to-date with each other or have their overlapping content be placed in a single article. Personally I like the idea of one big article (this one) that basically tells you everything about all the important facts and then links to other articles for the details. It's pretty hard to decide on a good level of detail for the main article and then change all the related articles to recap and expand on them. Nmrd 06:36, 26 October 2005 (UTC)


 * Maybe you should add musicdisks, slideshows... I dunno. I kinda formatted the Demo (computer programming) article to be more descriptive about the size aspect. Also, maybe we should make a List of demoparties? // Gargaj 10:47, 26 October 2005 (UTC)

What to do with all the external links?
The Demoscene entry appears to be very popular with people maintaining demoscene websites. Unfortunately, all of them feel that their site is worth mentioning at the bottom of the main article. Should we keep them there? I have two ideas about this: Any ideas? Nmrd 19:48, 17 December 2005 (UTC)
 * If we keep even a single link in the main article, people will just keep adding or re-adding their links, so this article will require regular maintenance, which is undesirable.
 * If we remove the links section altogether (there could be an article with just Demoscene links) we'll lose some really essential links that belong in the main article.


 * I personally don't see a problem with a lot of links - it gives the article more credibility. Besides, this way it's also a good starter for newbies. // Gargaj 23:00, 28 December 2005 (UTC)


 * I agree, it's just that most of the edits on the article are basically link additions. If it's not maintained I suppose itll end up being a huge article with 80% links. As it is it's already almost 50% of the page. But I suppose we can deal with it when that happens :) Nmrd 19:51, 30 December 2005 (UTC)


 * I feel that many of the links are dealing with specific aspects of the demoscene as a whole. There are links for the Amiga Demoscene, for example.  There is already a bunch of platform specific pages (under SEE ALSO), these links should go there.  But when speaking of external links on this specific Demoscene page, I think it should be limited to those which are considered a significant resource (Such as pouet or scene.org or ojuice) or it should have significant historical value (like Hornet Archive).  Almost everything under "Other demoscene-related pages" could go.  One might argue that PaIN and HUGI belong here, but there should be a new page for "diskmags", perhaps.  A true diskmag is really a demoscene thing. Coplan 22:08, 24 March 2006 (UTC)

Merge Proposal February 2006
I don't understand why there's so many pages about this. Isn't it all the same thing? Ewlyahoocom 17:28, 19 February 2006 (UTC)


 * The same thing in terms of "Mick Jagger is Rolling Stones", "bass drum is drum", "Cartoon is joke" or anything like that. I admit that the sub-articles aren't in the best shape ever - but they are definetely different from each other because Demoscene is about the scene as a culture, Demogroups are about the groups, people around it, etc. and Demo (computer programming) is about the product itself. I admit that Intros might be a bit far out, but the other articles are definitely standalone, and merging them would be inconsistent and needlessly enlenghten the article. // Gargaj 19:55, 19 February 2006 (UTC)


 * Unless someone wrote enough unique content for it, I would only suggest that Intros be merged into Demo (computer programming). That's it.  Demogroup and Demo (computer programming) should not be merged into Demoscene.  I agree with Gargaj's reasoning above.  A single demoscene article is already proving to be a challenge to organize. --Vossanova 15:05, 20 February 2006 (UTC)


 * A big problem with the Demoscene article is that it's already getting too bloated with all the deep specifics and irrelevant details while still leaving a lot of stuff unexplained (for instance, the article doesn't actually explain at all what a "demo" or "demogroup" is). I think the Demoscene article should provide an overall coverage (with relatively short explanations) of all the important concepts (demo, demoparty, demogroup etc.) without going into the deep specifics, which could very well be in separate (sub)articles. My suggestion: merge the "Demo types" subsection of Demoscene into Demo (computer programming) (and replace with a "Demos" section explaining what a demo is). Also merge Intros, Crack intros and any other short and stubbish demo-related articles into Demo (computer programming). Demogroup, on the other hand, requires improvement rather than merging. Viznut 09:11, 22 February 2006 (UTC)


 * Sounds really reasonable - who's up for doing it? // Gargaj 11:19, 22 February 2006 (UTC)
 * I might; I worked on that section anyway. For now, I'll just remove the current merge suggestions and put one in that section. --Vossanova 14:55, 22 February 2006 (UTC)

OK, so if a Demo (computer programming) is like a Powerpoint presentation, then a Demogroup is the work group that puts together the Powerpoint presentation and Demoscene is some kind of Powerpoint culture? Call me dense but I still don't see why that requires 3 pages to explain... Ewlyahoocom 10:14, 2 March 2006 (UTC)


 * Because it isnt. A demo is like a song, a demogroup is like a band and the demoscene is like the music industry. Or: A demo is like a video game, a demogroup is like a bunch of video game developers (essentially a video game publisher) and the demoscene is like the video game industry. Your Powerpoint analogy dies at the "some kind of"-section because Powerpoint doesn't have a subculture behind it. Demos and demogroups have ~20 years of tradition (and thus, information) behind it, thus merging would extremely overbloat the main article and would eventually go against WP:SIZE. Also, demos as an artform are unique and far from self-evident, thus they deserve an article. // Gargaj 12:56, 2 March 2006 (UTC)


 * i agree with that --MilkMiruku 15:22, 2 March 2006 (UTC)

Splits
I guess the demoparty list would be nice to be split into a standalone list where a bit more elaboration could be spent on the individual parties. My other suggestion is splitting the demoparty defintion into Demoparty, although i dont know if there would be enough to fill the article with. // Gargaj 16:23, 2 April 2006 (UTC)


 * I agree with the latter suggestion, even if the new article will be stubbish at first. There's a lot to tell about parties besides a short description and a long list, and the potential content might expand far from the demoscene point of view due to the fact that many parties are now relevant to many other computer-related subcultures as well. And BTW, there already seems to be an article called copyparty which could also be merged in. Viznut 05:31, 5 April 2006 (UTC)


 * Demoparty seems to be a good idea, especially since when it's removed from this article, there'll be more space here to go into the other issues in more detail. Nmrd 07:49, 18 April 2006 (UTC)

Tracker articles being deleted
I know this isn't the right place for stuff like this, but in case you are touched by silly deletionist fights like this: the article for Schism Tracker, the ONLY semi-decent Impulse Tracker clone for modern operating systems, was recently deleted per VfD. You may still vote for undelete in Deletion review. Viznut 12:17, 21 April 2006 (UTC)


 * Sorry, i'm an FT2 fan ;) // Gargaj 15:34, 21 April 2006 (UTC)

WikiProject Demoscene?
What are your thoughts about starting up a demoscene WikiProject? It seems there are at least a few people (Gargaj, Viznut.. erm, myself ;) who are knowledgable and reliable enough to maintain demo-related articles. We could cover trackers as well. The subject itself may be relatively small, but with the growing number of demo, demo group, demo party, and tracker articles, a structured project may be called for. --Vossanova 17:29, 27 April 2006 (UTC)


 * What's a WikiProject? // Gargaj 23:08, 27 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Umm.. really? WikiProject


 * I'm not sure whether a WikiProject is the exact thing we need, but at least we need a place for guidelines, notability criteria etc. and perhaps a more generic place for discussing stuff like this. So, well, perhaps a WikiProject is fine, I'm in.
 * Anyway, a problem with the Wikipedia+demoscene combination is that if we start systematically including notable demos, parties and groups, we'll eventually get very close to the "vanity line". Even the articles for highly notable groups tend to attract clueless deletionists (I remember at least keWlers, Pulse and recently, Melon Dezign having been proposed for deletion), so we may have really hard time in protecting everything. In my opinion, we should concentrate on quality and more generic concepts than on the creation of a lot of separate demo/group articles (we would need a separate "demopedia" for all that information). -- Viznut 06:43, 28 April 2006 (UTC)


 * So basically the "WikiProject" is one big amalgam page of all things related? Like... categories? Seriously though, apart from being a good idea for, say, biology or rap music, a demoscene Wikiproject would have a lot less basis (being a culture based and rooted in self-promotion ;) and a lot more animosity from deletionists. I'd say we wait with this a bit. (Of course if you insist, i'm in.) Oh and... "Demoscene wiki" exists - only not public yet ;) // Gargaj 10:43, 28 April 2006 (UTC)
 * OK, no WikiProject for the time being. --Vossanova o&lt; 20:08, 18 May 2006 (UTC)

Article flow
Right now the different sections are organized in such a way that it's a bit hard to follow if you have no idea what the demoscene is. My proposal to solve this is to make the article more coherent by putting the sections in a different order and letting them introduce each other. For instance: What would basically work I think is if each section would introduce the main point of the next section. As above, the next section starts off with a detailed discussion of something mentioned at the end of the previous section. This idea would introduce a "Scener" section which I think makes sense. Also I haven't placed the "Impact" section in this setup yet. It can probably stay at the bottom where it is now. Nmrd 21:46, 2 May 2006 (UTC).
 * Introduction (top section) (=> What's this about? What are demos?)
 * Concept (=> Detailed discussion: What are demos? What kind of demos are there?)
 * Demo types (=> Detailed discussion: What kind of demos are there? Who make them?)
 * Sceners (=> Detailed discussion: Who make them? How are they organized?)
 * Groups (=> Detailed discussion: How are they organized? Where to they gather?)
 * Parties (=> Detailed discussion: Where do they gather? What do they do there?)
 * Competitions (=> Detailed discussion: What do they do there?)
 * Go for  it  -  thats  kindof  how  i  wrote  the  article  for  huwiki.  //Gargaj 23:09, 2 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Sounds ok for me. Of course, we need to write the "Sceners" section at some point of time (it will require some information that isn't yet found anywhere in the article). -- Viznut 06:42, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Yeah, a reordering like that would be okay. Your Concept and Demo types sections sound redundant, however, so maybe lose Concept.  Also, would the Sceners and Groups sections overlap each other?  And yes, you could probably keep most of the Impact section, at the bottom where it is now. --Vossanova 14:38, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
 * I agree that Concept and Demo types overlap too much, especially with the general introduction above it as well. My idea for Sceners and Groups is that the former would discuss the different roles and activities (in short) and that the latter would focus only on what groups as a whole do, such as go to parties and release stuff (since internally they are just a collection of Sceners :)) I will try to do a first overhaul this evening or tomorrow. Nmrd 15:34, 3 May 2006 (UTC)

Templates?
Ok, anyone has some ideas for some Demoscene templates? Maybe something with the connected main articles listed, like either Template:Suicide or Template:Analogvideo? Or maybe even some generic infoboxes for demos and demogroups? // Gargaj 18:13, 21 June 2006 (UTC)


 * It seems that we already have an article series here, so we definitely need a navigation template. Maybe one that would stick to the upper right corner (like Template:Suicide) would be visible enough. Perhaps we could also have a "footer bar" -style template for the major demoparties. Dunno about infoboxes though. --Viznut 10:11, 22 June 2006 (UTC)


 * How's this -> // Gargaj 15:29, 22 June 2006 (UTC)


 * Otherwise very nice, although I somewhat disagree with the platform-specific links until we have an article for PC demos: until then, a casual reader might get an imperssion of a computer subculture mainly focusing on historical platforms. It'd be perhaps OK to replace it with links to major parties. I was also worried about the link to disk magazine, because the concept is older than the demoscene diskmags. --Viznut 10:40, 26 June 2006 (UTC)


 * Updated the template accordingly; opinions, please. --Viznut 10:47, 26 June 2006 (UTC)

We could perhaps use Template:Infobox computer underground for demo groups. See ACiD Productions for an example use. --Viznut 10:40, 26 June 2006 (UTC)

My input: --Vossanova o&lt; 14:01, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
 * I would like to see a template on the bottom of the page for the "(Platform) demos" articles at some point, with all the platforms on it; but like Viznut said, maybe we should wait until a "PC demos" article is made.
 * The "Infobox computer underground" template would work well for demo groups - obviously certain fields won't be filled in. Is the template final/official yet?  If so, let's try it out for one of the groups.
 * I'd like to see a demo infobox template as well, but that can wait until we get more demo articles and a better idea of what goes in them.
 * The Demoscene infobox template featured in this discussion is too broad; we don't need party and website links on every demoscene-related article. Instead, might we make a footer template for just concepts (demo, demoparty, demogroup, compo) and put it on those four pages?

I like the underground template idea, and i agree that a demo infobox needs some more demos first. On the other hand, I don't think it's too broad, it's just a few links really and it kindof makes it look a bit bigger. the footer template would kindof look silly and non-serious. // Gargaj 14:07, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
 * So is it only going on the Demoscene article? That's okay; it just seems excessive for every article related to the demoscene. --Vossanova o&lt; 15:20, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Just for the main ones (demoscene, demo, demogroup, demoparty) but not necessarily for websites, etc. // Gargaj 16:55, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Ok I added the template to Outracks. Wonder if it's good enough. // Gargaj 14:17, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
 * I expanded the template to have an additional parameter for platform(s). The "product(s)" listing can get quite long for some groups, so perhaps it should only include the most notable releases and a link to a comprehensive listing (such as a pouet.net page). --Viznut 07:01, 27 June 2006 (UTC)

So what's the status with the main template? Should we keep it on the side, or change it to a footer? I'm kindof confused now. // Gargaj 20:19, 29 June 2006 (UTC)

The footer could look something like this:

// Gargaj 20:23, 29 June 2006 (UTC)


 * I'd vote for the side version --Viznut 08:34, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Added to main article. Anyone up to spread? // Gargaj 09:33, 7 July 2006 (UTC)
 * It's now in all of the "concepts" articles. Some additional layout work might be needed for other articles. --Viznut 11:26, 7 July 2006 (UTC)

Can anyone add the link http://sceen.org/microsite/ to that template in the Magazines part? I am new to Wikipedia editing and don't know how to do it. Maybe Magazines should also be called Paper Magazines as well. - DCMP
 * I dont know, SCEEN isn't a 100% demoscene magazine and also doesn't have an article... It is relevant, but it needs to be established first. // Gargaj 14:53, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
 * What Gargaj said.. anything linked in the template needs to be to a Wikipedia article, not an external site. --Vossanova o&lt; 17:43, 11 May 2007 (UTC)

Since noone other than Gargaj commented on it, I'd like to get feedback on a new horizontal/end-of-page template design which I've created here. If there is enough support for it, I think it should replace the current template, otherwise I'll continue to leave the template like it is. --Vossanova o&lt; 19:37, 20 February 2009 (UTC)

dutch colour scheme
Since dutch colour scheme sadly redirects to color scheme (without any information) I hereby request that you give it a try: original content. It needs some improvement, but I'd like to see it as an own article, because it doesn't really fit neither in color scheme nor in demoscene. --32X 16:36, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
 * It's a joke term used only in the demoscene (and mostly just Pouet users, really), so I wouldn't give it its own article. It's mentioned in the PC Demoscene FAQ so you can just link to that.  --Vossanova o&lt; 16:47, 27 July 2006 (UTC)


 * Well, at least I was twice talking to sceners about demos/intros, mentioned the dutch colour scheme and they were like "WTF is DCS?" Since it's referenced here and there I'd go for a WP entry. --32X 16:57, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Not notable enough for Wikipedia. Refer them to the PC Demoscene FAQ instead. --Vossanova o&lt; 17:23, 27 July 2006 (UTC)

Link fest
Why are there so many links? virtually no other article on wp has that many.
 * I'd disagree, the more time you spend reading wikipedia the more you will see there are quite a lot like that. Sure it is on the upper end though. Mathmo Talk 06:50, 12 February 2007 (UTC)

Questionable Information at the "Concept" section
The argument that a lack of variation caused a competitive environment that created the scene is simply not true. Would it be possible at least to find a source supporting this or clarify how a lack of variation found in early computers actually sponsored such an environment?--Frozenport 19:12, 16 June 2007 (UTC)

History
I took the following citaton from the wikipedia in the subject Motorola_68000

"When the 68000 was introduced, 16-bit buses were really the most practical size. However, the 68000 was designed with 32-bit registers and address spaces, on the assumption that hardware prices would fall."

both model, at the begining of yout article what you mentioned (atati st and amiga) contained this processor, so it is not a 16bit minicomputer... i think

tnx


 * Not sure what this is in relation to, and what point you are trying to make, or who you are, but the 68000 is internally 32-bit and externally 16-bit, with a 24-bit address bus, lower 16 lines multiplexed with the 16-bit data bus. Amiga 500 was a 16-bit computer and the first entirely 32-bit Amiga was A3000 with MC68030 CPU. Needless to say this happened years before PCs became 32-bit. ;-) My real question is, why is Atari mentioned before Amiga in the article? Atari was, by far, less significant in the demo scene than the Amiga. --84.250.188.136 (talk) 11:44, 2 July 2008 (UTC)

Emulation
I've personally seen a large number of public domain 'rom" files for various emulators that contain stand-alone demos of this type. What would I need for this to be added? Would a reference to the (legal) download sites be appropriate? LordShonus (talk) 03:06, 19 February 2009 (UTC)
 * It would make more sense to post such a link in Demo (computer programming), rather than here. However, external links on that page have been removed, suggesting that one or more editors thought that the list of links was getting out of hand.  So, while it is safe to mention in the article that emulation files are available for demos, a list of download sites could be considered incomplete or subjective.  Also, demos are not necessarily public domain; they are generally free but modification and sales without permission are usually forbidden by the authors. --Vossanova o&lt; 19:31, 20 February 2009 (UTC)

Buenzli Undeletion on German Wikipedia
I wonder if you could assist me in proofing the Relevance of the Buenzli Demoparty in the German Wikipedia http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Löschprüfung#Buenzli Thanks a lot :-) --82.113.121.145 (talk) 20:19, 17 November 2009 (UTC)

Issues tags added without tagging content with issues
The issues specified were resolved yesterday. Today, it is tagged with more issues than it had yesterday. Awaiting specifics, so the alleged issue can be resolved (again). Is it good practice on Wikipedia to add issues without specifying what the issues are? Henrik Erlandsson 11:43, 3 September 2014 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by HenrikErlandsson (talk • contribs)


 * Unfortunately, the issues were not resolved. There are still countless unsourced sentences on the article, which means it still has original research and unverifiable claims. Also, some of the sources listed are not reliable. --Λeternus (talk) 08:01, 4 September 2014 (UTC)


 * Not every sentence needs to have a reference, and if any parts of the article are particularly dubious, either tag them individually or remove them. I just added a bunch of references to academic works studying the demoscene. There's not a lot of them, but some contain interesting information, in particular Reunanen's thesis (not cited yet). Q VVERTYVS (hm?) 15:03, 17 October 2014 (UTC)

Certainly they were. All sentences marked with citeref got a valid reference to support the sentence. If they're not valid, you should give a reason, or supply ones that are valid. If references support the claim but are demoscene websites that have archived and documented the demoscene online for decades and are (in your mind) therefore strangely invalid, you should add your origresearch, refimprove, and unreliable tags to 100000 other WP articles as well.Henrik Erlandsson 16:34, 21 September 2014 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by HenrikErlandsson (talk • contribs)

Solutions for demogroup notability

 * [Discussion moved per request from Czar -- [[user:intgr|intgr]] [talk] 08:46, 21 September 2014 (UTC)]

With the recent deletion wave of several demogroup articles, I've seen people arguing the same things over and over again. What pro-demoscene editors see as "deletionist attacks", I see as people arguing for the preservation of articles that are not justified. But every time I defend the deletionist side, it bothers me that people end up with wasted effort and hurt feelings. So this is my attempt at a constructive proposal that can satisfy both sides.

I think debating the applicability Wikipedia guidelines and policy will not lead to any common ground -- we've seen it many times in deletion discussions -- please let's not go down that path. Let's talk about solutions that are within Wikipedia policies beyond doubt.

The deletions are based on the notability guideline, which is stricter about sources than verifiability. What comes up every time is that sources exist; the argument is over is whether they're sufficient for notability. So the alternative to deletion is merging to a more general article that has sufficient notability. For example, someone could create an Assembly competition winners article that has sections for each noteworthy winner (better article topics/titles welcome, I'm no expert on this subject). Articles in danger of deletion could be merged there instead. And I think deletion review will be happy to restore articles for merging, especially if we can establish a consensus here.

I won't be the one volunteering to do that work, but hopefully motivated demoscene editors can organize to do that instead. -- intgr [talk] 14:10, 19 September 2014 (UTC)


 * The problem may also be that deletionists don't see the relevance and are not bothered to check for sources. As for people knowing the demo scene it may be helpful to read WP:NONPROFIT. Many demoscene groups and events are international and that should be possible to verify using various sources (that don't have to be mainstream sources, but can be reliable sources from within the scene itself). Some have also suggested that it is better to create a separate article for each notable demo instead of for the group. // Liftarn (talk)
 * You're not helping by repeating arguments from deletion discussions. We have to agree to disagree on the question of notability. Fact is that articles are being deleted and I'm proposing merging as an alternative to retain that content. -- intgr [talk] 09:25, 21 September 2014 (UTC)


 * I think it's silly to refer to "deletionists" as if there were a vendetta against demoscene articles. I'm an uninvolved editor and I look at all AfD nominations the same: does it or does it not have significant coverage in multiple reliable, independent sources? And if that looks like a bunch of links you don't have time to read, WP:42 is much shorter and explains it well. The most coverage I have seen in any demoscene AfD thus far is two mentions of having won in a category at Assembly, as documented by Scene.org. This would source maybe one sentence apiece in the article. Anything else would have no reliable source. Topics that can only source two sentences are either merged or deleted. The first time I read this thread, I thought it would be fine to redirect the groups to a List of Assembly demo and intro competition winners but I'm realizing now that the list currently in the Assembly article would be only sourced to a single website, with little reporting on what happened each year. It is an excessive amount of information that is given undue weight in the article (Assembly only has two short and largely unsourced sections). This all comes back to sources. On your accusation that no one bothered to check for sources, I did. Please show me what sites and engines I should be searching in order to find secondary coverage with editorial control, because I could find none. If the only sources are blogs and self-published sources, we cannot use that alone to source an article. If you look at AfD, that applies to all articles, not just demoscene-related articles. czar ♔   14:27, 21 September 2014 (UTC)
 * Bibliography with 170 items: http://www.kameli.net/demoresearch2/?page_id=4 --Ondertitel (talk) 20:44, 21 September 2014 (UTC)
 * Thanks, but I see no mention of the individual demogroups there. If you're suggesting one or two as sources to prove sigcov/notability of individual demogroups, I'm happy to go through the ordeal of tracking down the academic article, but it's not on me to go sorting through 170 arbitrary academic articles. czar ♔   22:39, 22 September 2014 (UTC)
 * Disagree with the "deletionist" description, it may be confused with the acts of one WP editor applying the standard diligently to all demoscene articles and no others. Producing demos and going to parties basically constitutes what it means to be in this subculture, so they certainly belong. But any section on demoscene groups would be better suited on the page for Demoscene Group. Even then, notability can always be questioned, especially since it's a subculture to being with, but it's the same for articles on art, music, and other subcultures.Henrik Erlandsson 18:14, 21 September 2014 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by HenrikErlandsson (talk • contribs)
 * The problem is that articles on demo groups or demo parties require more than articles on other forms of art/music. For instance for bands it is enough that they are signed to a label or won an award. For demo groups people now require major mainstream coverage. // Liftarn (talk)


 * For the record, I am all for abolishing the arbitrary criteria in subject-specific notability guidelines and only sticking to WP:GNG, because that's actually rooted in core Wikipedia values and policies (WP:WHYN). -- intgr [talk] 20:45, 22 September 2014 (UTC)
 * Even if that were done, the idea expressed further above, that sources from within the demoscene itself can be used to help establish notability for scene-related stuff, is false, because such sources are not independent of the subject, as required by WP:Notability. The OP is correct that the proper and only way to save the kind of potentially  information on the demoscene that isn't quite  is to merge it into articles on scene-related topics that  notable. And what the inclusionists keep failing to understand is that "notable" here doesn't mean "important in the demoscene", it means "proven by the criteria of WP:GNG to the satisfaction of the Wikipedia community".  It's absurd to create a separate stub article for winners of compos at demoparties, when the standard operating procedure, across all articles types and topics, is to include winners of awards, prizes, trophies, and competitions in the article on the event in question, unless and until such time as that article becomes so large that WP:SUMMARYSTYLE is required and stuff has to be forked off into sub-articles. That is extremely unlikely to ever be necessary for any article on any demoscene compo, party, group, etc.  — SMcCandlish ☺ ☏ ¢ ≽ʌⱷ҅ᴥⱷʌ≼  11:53, 17 July 2015 (UTC)

Merge RfC
Proposed merge of Demoscene compo, Demoparty, and List of demoparties, after removal of unsourced material, to Demoscene. These have all be flagged for cleanup for years, and it's not happening, but one combined article might actually make it to B class or better. At very least, Demoscene compo and List of demoparties can merge, leaving two aticles, Demoscene and Demoparty. Demoparties are simply a subtopic of demoscene, and this article is not long enough (and after merge would still not be long enough) to require splitting per WP:SUMMARY. Even more so for compos; this isn't even really a proper subtopic, it's just mostly what demoparties are about. The list of demoparties is short. If kept as a list, its difficult-to-edit table format should be replaced with normal list format. It would actually be better to reuse the material in chronological order, combined with the existing history material, to form four normal-paragraph blocks of history content (1980s, 1990s, 2000s, and 2010s). By way of analogy, this is mess is much like having an article on Drum and bass music, and then content-forking like mad to have separate articles on Drum and bass dancing at clubs, Drum and bass clubs, and List of drum and bass clubs. Dancing, and clubbing, and dance clubs as entities are all sourceable parts of drum-and-bass electronic music sub-subculture, but it's unhelpful to micro-fork articles in this way. It leads to trivial cruft, and to unsourced, WP:COI/WP:POV/WP:OR-inflected edits, and to a fragmentary approach to coverage of the topic that makes it harder to understand for readers, and harder to maintain or improve for editors. This proposal excludes demoscene-related articles that are on distinct topics, like software, specific notable demoparties as events, demogroups as art collectives, etc. These four particular articles are simply increasingly nit-pickily forked, lagely-unsourced stubs on the demoscene as an organized subcultural activity, which is essentially a single topic. PS: I find it perturbing that, above, there are proposals to create things like List of Assembly demo and intro competition winners, when that can simply be an embedded list in Assembly (demoparty). This fork-everything-into-the-ground approach has to stop. But do note that proposal, and the entire thread up there (among others on these talk pages, along with the few sources), illustrate the that compos are part of the parties and are thus subtopics thereof; the compos at parties like Assembly are not distinct topical entities with their own names and histories. By contrast, if I may make some further comparisons, the World Artistic Pool Championship, which is held amid the VNEA International Pool Championships for shared venue convenience, is a separate event, including for WP purposes, being organized by unrelated organizations – rather like the common practice of having a bank branch inside a supermarket or a chain fast-food restaurant inside a huge retail store. Not true of compos at demoparties. — SMcCandlish ☺ ☏ ¢ ≽ʌⱷ҅ᴥⱷʌ≼  11:41, 17 July 2015 (UTC)
 * , go for it czar  15:24, 23 December 2015 (UTC)
 * Support concerning this: At very least, Demoscene compo and List of demoparties can merge, leaving two articles, Demoscene and Demoparty. For the next step, not sure. Anyway, I think the tag is been on for too long now, don't you think? You met no opposition so far (since July 2015...). If you can work it out on just one page, I support your complete merging. I'm just afraid it's more work to merge the 4, than just cleaning up three. Thanks for that. darthbunk pakt dunf T 21:35, 12 January 2017 (UTC)
 * I'm hoping someone who knows more about the topic's details would do the merge. Maintenance tags need to stay until the maintenance is done. The ones to be concerned about are the sourcing and reliability ones that have been here since 2014. If the material in question is not going to be sourced properly, it should be removed promptly. Merge stuff is a secondary cleanup matter.  — SMcCandlish ☺ ☏ ¢ ≽ʌⱷ҅ᴥⱷʌ≼  00:21, 13 January 2017 (UTC)
 * Make that 2006. Most of the articles were completed by then. I'm sure they are reliable, but sourcing is pretty much non existent now. Times were different and editors have pissed off creators and people that care a long time ago. Just do a basic merge. All came from here originally anyway. We know as soon as someone starts referencing it, a clown can jump in not much later and remove everything that isn't sourced yet. The result will be worse. Sourcing is not easy and harder than writing something you know all about. No need to know the topic btw. Just find good sources and see where this leads. Here's a list of the best sources. Make it one article again and ignore the other concerns for the time being. Ondertitel (talk) 03:27, 13 January 2017 (UTC)
 * Agreed and merged. Klbrain (talk) 13:05, 11 November 2017 (UTC)

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obscure self indulgent twaddle
poor article making no attempt to explain what demoscene to those who did not already know before coming here - perhaps explaining what a demo is would be a good starting point — Preceding unsigned comment added by Cobalt69 (talk • contribs) 01:31, 31 December 2018 (UTC)


 * The very first sentence of the article does exactly that. Maybe you skipped over it? --Trixter (talk) 17:49, 25 February 2019 (UTC)

hardware independent or hardware competition?
We contradict ourselves:

"...variations among demos created for one computer line were attributed to programming alone, rather than one computer having better hardware. This created a competitive environment in which demoscene groups would try to outperform each other in creating outstanding effects, and often to demonstrate why they felt one machine was better than another (for example Commodore 64 or Amiga versus Atari 8-bit family or Atari ST)."

Which is it? Is about programing, not hardware, or is it about which hardware is best? Ben Aveling 10:57, 18 May 2020 (UTC)

Please avoid putting a phrase similar to "first demo" in this article as it's not yet been determined - it will throw off search engines
The question was seriously posed in 2018 with criteria to make a certain release a Demoscene demo ("the one that started it") and it hasn't been answered in 3 years despite lots of hindrance and some help from the general Demoscene members on Pouet.

By the criteria that make something a Demoscene demo and not a product demo, game intro, game demo, PD release or similar, it should have the same characteristics of the early demos that are not first: made for the purpose of watching it on its own, credit handles in groups, and mention handles or groups other than the authors (thereby establishing a scene). See the thread for more detailed information. Because of these criteria (see link for more details), it may be that we find the second Demoscene demo first. It may or may not reference the actual first Demoscene demo, but handles and groups that are in the scene but have not yet released. If this is the case, we will only know ever the second Demoscene demo, and this must be good enough to feature on this page, because there's no possible substitute.

Henrik Erlandsson 21:54, 28 April 2021 (UTC)

Merger proposal
I propose merging 64K intro into Demoscene as per @Anachronist comment removing prod on 64K intro. As a standalone article 64K intro does not appear notable, but its content likely is in the context of Demoscene. KeepItGoingForward (talk) 23:56, 9 December 2022 (UTC)


 * Yeah this is so obvious that it doesn't need a proposal. The demoscene articles on Wikipedia are made of a zillion miles of WP:FANCRUFT brigading, with a tiny peppering of WP:RS. The presentation notes from Siggraph is not an WP:RS but could possibly be a situational source to back up a RS, or to have a few non-controversial specs. All those fan sites are WP:ELNO. These articles all need to be mass merged or just redirected. Countless other topics are the same way, like comics, board games, and Saturday Night Live. Thank you. — Smuckola(talk) 00:09, 10 December 2022 (UTC)
 * Redirected in what way would be one possible solution? I am all for cleaning up wiki. KeepItGoingForward (talk) 00:14, 10 December 2022 (UTC)
 * Just to right here. Replace all the contents with  at least, as with this (WP:R). If merging, then include the WP:RS like theverge.com but not WP:ELNO because in many cases, it's just a WP:LINKFARM posed as citations. A good list of RSes is at WP:VGRS. — Smuckola(talk) 00:26, 10 December 2022 (UTC)
 * Fine with me. There is a small amount of content in 64K intro that is worth preserving in a merge. ~Anachronist (talk) 01:57, 10 December 2022 (UTC)
 * Okay, merge complete. @Smuckola you are welcome to remove any references you believe aren't appropriate, as I moved everything over. KeepItGoingForward (talk) 20:57, 10 December 2022 (UTC)

Dwitter?
Should https://www.dwitter.net be mentioned?

Rudxain (talk) 01:06, 11 May 2024 (UTC)