Thread:FFfangirl/@comment-4820209-20200124062723/@comment-4820209-20200126190146

I run a weird thought on the first one. Mostly because, and not to crassly generalize, the people who have trouble editing these things will be the same people who won't edit the film names as a single line of text, regardless. Leading to me debating on whether or not it's worth the work, when I'm one of the few who even bothers with this. If people were inputting hex codes more and only getting one in, while having trouble with say, the section BG, I could get simplifying it. But no one does, already. Even when you could just copy or look at a similar page. It'd mostly wind up being a matter of convenience for more veteran editors.

Second, if you want to stop the plural nature of things, just rename the template. Or, if it's locked, ask me to. I made these things in like, 2017/18, lol. So there's bound to be titling "errors". Renaming will redirect the template on pages it's not changed on.

I guess what I need to ask is, do you have problems with the actual layout of things, or were those your only issues? Because I don't follow the full on layout changes.

Likewise, I've seen editing/additions of categories. Specifically stuff like "Godzilla: King of the Monsters: Characters". I know I originally was going with that layout of organization, but I dropped it quickly when it simultaneously became underused, and a mess to navigate. Think about monsters, people, things, etc that only appear in one film. Is it really worth dedicating a category to them when you could generalize the continuity by monster, character, etc. You'd change navigation from:

<Showa era<Showa era - Characters

to

<Showa era<Showa era - Characters<Godzilla (1954 film): Characters

Not to mention there will be crossover between movies. So you'll have individual film categories on one character, or monster when they're in the same continuity, and another film. OR, only appear in one film. It's just easier to go "continuity<continuity - X", and becomes less of an eyesore and pain to navigate. Simple is the spice of life.