Talk:King's Knight

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Former good articleKing's Knight was one of the Sports and recreation good articles, but it has been removed from the list. There are suggestions below for improving the article to meet the good article criteria. Once these issues have been addressed, the article can be renominated. Editors may also seek a reassessment of the decision if they believe there was a mistake.
Article milestones
DateProcessResult
May 5, 2006Good article nomineeListed
July 26, 2006Good article reassessmentDelisted
Current status: Delisted good article

Looking for: game credits, month and day of North American release date, and the MSX version's cover/box[edit]

OK, if anyone can help me find a few things, this article is in bad need of them. The only designer I know is Uematsu; that's because his site lists King's Knight as part of his production credits. As for the North American release date, I only know that it's 1989 - I have the game's booklet, but it makes no mention of the release date (not suprising, but neither does it list production credits unfortunately). Finally, I want to set up a new infobox for the MSX version - therefore, we need an image of the MSX game and its box. I believe it warrants its own infobox (much like the MSX version of Final Fantasy I has its own infobox), because of the big differences between the MSX version and NES version. I've checked a few more screenshots of the MSX game, and it looks like there are different monster designs as well. I'll try playing through the MSX game via emulator, but it's extremely difficult (the game is difficult enough as it is, but the MSX's inability to vertically scroll the game creates huge "lag" and it's almost impossible to progress). Anyways, if anyone could help with this stuff, that'd be great! Thanks,

- Tristam 12:02 a.m., 11 April 2006 (CST)

Good Article[edit]

According to Wikipedia:What is a good article?, this article is somewhat brief and concise, but is rational in regards to the source material and its time of creation. It fullfils numerous guidelines raised in the policy, such as it has compelling prose, and is readily comprehensible to a non-specialist reader, being well written, and adhered to a neutral point of view. The image gallery is still a gray area amoung some contributors, although I believe it is nelligiable to the source content and is presented in a plausible manner. The game may be too obsure to attain featured article status, though. -ZeroTalk 15:41, 5 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Delisted GA[edit]

I delisted the GA for several reasons

  1. Images need fair use rationale, and several especially the small character images looks like it's only used for decereation and violates WP:FU.
  2. Few refs, one of them from the Instruction Manual which is not a valid source
  3. Nothing on crtiticsm of the game

Jaranda wat's sup 03:12, 26 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Developer[edit]

This game is by Square. It's credited to Square in all associated materials and Square is the "developer" when IGN and MobyGames break out the "developer" field. If we didn't always break things into binaries, "Square" would be listed as the author. Credits to Workss/Bits as the dev are all original research. The closest we get to proof of their association is the mention of "Workss" on the title screen of the game—"(c) 1986 Square Programmed by Workss"—but that's just as much work for hire as giving them full "developer" credits. (The 1989 title screen doesn't even mention Workss.) Any instances I can find of Workss's involvement in the project appear to be citogenesis from this very article. I say we're safer sticking with IGN and making a note that Workss was mentioned as the programmers on the title screen, because that's all we've got... but that still makes it a "Square" game. czar 20:31, 10 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]