User:CrazyRob926

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I try to help out wiki as much as I can. Usually just small edits and vandalism reverts. I really enjoy finding, reverting and reporting vandalism. My edits and contributions may seem random because I LOVE the "Random article" button, but I make sure to research every article I edit. When I see a cite request I try my best to find one, when I see a POV statement I make sure to request a cite or remove it. Information you might think "everyone knows" still needs a cite, if anything it helps prevent hoaxes and they make an article more respectable. In my opinion a article for the most part can NOT have too many cites or inline links, and EVERY article needs at least a few references and cites to prevent original work being published on wiki. My personal goal is to try to make wikipedia as accurate, easy to use, and non-POV as possible.

I have a Serious Wikipediholism Problem, especially when it comes to tracking down vandalism, non-encyclopedic articles, and tagging pages with templates. I also try to keep an eye out for ideas to start new articles, but that's pretty damn hard since wikipedia has a article on just about everything you can think of.

I am always on the lookout for vandalism or other articles and statements that are not encyclopedic, Wikipedia is NOT a database for information on everything and everything that happens in the world, it needs to fit the notability guidelines for inclusion in wikipedia, or users like Me will tag and/or remove it.

-CrazyRob926 (talk · contribs · count)

This user has been awarded the Userbox Star Award for creating a particularly notable userbox.




Articles Started by Me[edit]

Articles I have contributed significantly to[edit]







List building

There are three basic steps to building a topic list for Wikipedia: the first is to search Wikipedia to make sure it doesn't already have a list on the subject. The second step is to hunt down every word you can find on the subject, from your own memory, books, web directories, dictionaries, etc. Surround each term with double square brackets, and save the page.

Because Wikipedia has become so extensive, don't be surprised if most or even all of the links turn out blue (those are live links, each leading to an article on Wikipedia). Dead-end links are red, but don't remove them, because they show what articles Wikipedia is missing — anyone can click on a red link to create an article on that topic. The third step is checking each live article in the list for links to related topics. When you find one, add it to the list.

To add this auto-updating template to your user page, use {{totd}}