MarioWiki:Conjectural names

A Conjecture is an opinion, statement or name formed on the basis of incomplete, undisclosed or doubtful information. Here at the Super Mario Wiki, we strive to keep all articles as close and as accurate as possible to the complete Mario series of Games, Books, TV shows, etc. However, there may be times where a particular subject that is worthy of an article on the wiki has never been given an official, disclosed title by Nintendo (or any other publisher, developer, etc.). This page explains the best things to do in these situations, and how to correctly use conjectural templates to give acknowledgement of a speculated article title.

Conjectural titles
When a situation arises where an article's subject was never given a known, official title and a user is unsure of what to name the article prior to it's creation, then they are entitled to choose themselves the most appropriate name to fit the subject. Wherever this is done, the article must be tagged with at the top of the page, to show that the page's title is unconfirmed and speculated. Not doing so can result in confusion between what titles are official and what's has been decided on a matter of speculation. Also, please note that conjectural-titled pages should only be created if the subject is notable enough to have it's own article. It is unnecessary to create a conjectural page for every minor subject, such as most unnamed non-playable characters in RPG games (see Minor NPCs), or most generic subjects (see Generic Subjects). Many of the minor planets within the galaxies in Super Mario Galaxy and its sequel were never given official names by Nintendo. The same guidelines described above must be followed when users choose a name for a planet, but a few extra points apply. The conjectural must be clear and straightforward, describing in one or two words which planet is it talking about. Names must be sensible and professional, and the first planet must always be named "Starting Planet".

There is also a similar template called. It's purpose is to show when a subject is given an official name in one appearance, and then in a later appearance a similar subject is found and worth noting in the article, but there is no confirmed name for that appearance. It can also work the other way, where a subject was not given a confirmed title and then a later appearance of a similar subject is given an official title. It is important to remember that this does not confirm the title of the previous appearance. In either situation, is used instead of.

Conjectural glitch names
When a speculation-based name is mentioned on an article and indication is needed to show that the name is conjectural, the template is used. This template is recommended to be used on glitches pages for games, as a vast majority of in-game glitches went unnoticed through development and were discovered through public use. Therefore, Nintendo themselves have not given official names for many glitches. Since most glitches are not given their own article, but merged into one article to the game it appears in, it would be considered inappropriate to just tag the top of the glitch page with, since the template refers to the title of the article, not it's content.

On each header that names a glitch, should be used like this:. On an article, it would appear as so; (hover your cursor over the text to see the effect of the template).

If an official name is found
If an official name is found after any period of time prior to the creation of the article, it may be moved to the new, official title and the,  or  template removed. A source of the new name would need to be either; linked by URL when filling in the reason for the page's move, or added as a reference in the article. Make sure you have found an acceptable source to name the article. When the page has been moved, all pages that link to the article would now be made a redirect and these need to be bypassed by changing the link to the correct title; especially ones on navigation templates as this would count as a majority of the links. Unlinked mentions of the article's name, such as within text on another article, must be also be changed as diligently as possible.