Talk:Finley

What to do with this article
Since not everyone agrees with my interpretation of this situation, I'm going to use another multi-option proposal here. Though here are my thoughts with respect to this situation: I think Blue Finleys are clearly the parent species, seeing as how: Though interpret my findings however you like.
 * Green Finleys are completely different in design. While Blue and Red Finleys resemble s, Green Finleys more closely resemble other freshwater fish, such as s.
 * Red Finleys are far less common than their blue counterparts, and aren't even seen out of water, unlike Blue Finleys.

Proposer: Deadline: May 4, 2021, 23:59 GMT

Delete and consider Blue Finleys as the primary species

 * 1) My preferred option.
 * 2) If we have a primary species then there's no point to having a disambiguation page.

Convert to a disambiguation page but nonetheless consider Blue Finleys as the primary species

 * 1) Second choice.
 * 2) Second choice

Convert to a disambiguation page and don't consider any species to be the primary one

 * 1) Like Tileoid was, the page is kind of already a disambiguation.
 * 2) I'd be okay with this too.
 * 3) I've always thought deciding whatever would be the parent species for certain things was a bit arbitrary.
 * 4) - I prefer this option, saying the Blue Finleys are the parent seems a little subjective to me.
 * 5) Per all.

Comments
I'd prefer merging blue and red here (since they actually are color variations) and leaving green as the sole derivative (or even simply relative), myself. Doc von Schmeltwick (talk)
 * Not fully color variations, the red ones are faster than the blue ones. 15:23, April 20, 2021 (EDT)
 * That is "color variation" of the same type as red and blue Spike Tops in Super Mario Maker. Or more appropriately, gray and red Cheep Cheeps in the original Super Mario Bros. Doc von Schmeltwick (talk) 15:27, April 20, 2021 (EDT)