Hello again and happy winter solstice time! Except if you live on the southern hemisphere...if so happy summer solstice time! It’s us again, because we don't know when to shut up; we don't know HOW to shut up! We added a new main portal design a few months ago, and we hope you like it, it’s even friendly to mobile phones. However this Liquipedia Review will try and shed some light on the people who contribute. We did sneak a feature update in there too, and had so many fun tweets to choose from we went and chose a lot of them.
Yer a wizard, ‘Arry!
by kollin
As an outsider looking in, editing Liquipedia can sometimes be scary, or intimidating. All those templates and all those different types of brackets could well confuse you if you're new to coding in general. They sure as hell confused me, which put me off ever changing anything for a while. I just appreciated how brilliant a tool Liquipedia was, but I never thought about ever being one of the people making it a brilliant tool.
But one day, that changed. I wanted to contribute to the StarCraft 2 scene. I wanted to make a difference, to the game I loved, even if it was only a small difference, I wanted to contribute. So, one fateful DreamHack Valencia 2012, I updated a result. And that was it, I was hooked on editing. I began craving that feeling of “I contributed, I helped.” It felt good knowing that what I was doing was helping my passion. Not all of us can afford to spend money to help their favourite teams in StarCraft 2 or Dota 2. What I could do was update those teams' pages, and the player pages. I could make sure that when TaeJa wanted to know who he would be playing in the next round of DreamHack Summer 2012, the first place he would go would be Liquipedia, to check out the results I updated. I loved seeing my coins go up, and whenever I saw a player at a big tournament look at a page I'd worked on, I'd feel a rush go through my body.
So to you budding editors who aren't quite sure when and what they should be doing, and get put off as a result of it, I say: Don't leave. The Liquipedia community as a whole loves seeing someone new come in and start contributing. If you don't know how to contribute, please come to our IRC channel and ask! We probably won't bite! The sense of accomplishment you get from having just created a page for player, personality, patch, or tournament is incredible. And perhaps, more importantly than anything, you get some pretty sick coins to show off to the rest of TeamLiquid.
Why Do You Do It? Why Get Up?
by salle
While updating Liquipedia might be seen as trying to chop down a tree with a herring, there’s still hundreds of people doing it each month and we keep building on to the wikis. So awhile ago I asked the Liquipedia Contributors in our forum what reasons they had for contributing. What their motivations were. You've just heard from Kollin what his reasons were but there are many different reasons we contribute. Here's five of the main reasons:
1 Giving Back
“I just love the Team Liquid community and I wanted to contribute something, and in Liquipedia I found a way I could do that without needing any specialist knowledge or training or needing to commit specific time.”
We humans are social animals. We live in groups. We're also mammals and we care for our offspring, and as such nature has provided us with altruism. Doing something for others feels good. This is an immediate reward.
However giving back isn't just an altruistic thing. All around us in the Team Liquid community we see many people contributing in cool ways to better the community, and this can make us feel a sense of debt, wishing there was something that we could do that would also be useful to someone. And Liquipedia is a great way to give back to the community, not just the Team Liquid community, but the StarCraft—and more recently the Dota 2—communities at large.
2 Fixing Errors
“I started out just wanting to correct small mistakes that I came across, no intention of doing something big. Just helping with the little and obvious things I could do at the time.”
There's so many submissions made to the wiki that occasionally an error pops up—some grammar errors, type errors, and the like—that if you wanted to you could spend all day every day just going over every page to find and remove all of these. And for many of us that is something we did in the beginning before we got invested into the wiki. It's a simple edit: read a page, see an error, log in, find the error in the edit window, correct it, preview and save. Well for some of us it's more about things being “RIGHT!” than wanting to help the community.
“I have been editing BW content because the game had a very important role in my life, and I feel that contributing to Liquipedia is a way to make BW live forever.”
“I think I started editing because I felt some kind of obligation to preserve history, as it were, especially with the first few steps of SC2. I felt that our new beginning needed to be documented properly for future generations.”
The StarCraft and Dota 2 esports communities are niché communities, whether we like to admit it or not. If we want this part of our lives to be preserved who better to do it than you and I?
4 The Other Contributors
“After all of that I joined the Liquipedia community on irc, I found it awesome, saw that a ton of people were doing everything possible to improve the wiki and so I wanted to help [...]”
“Then, I was able to actually talk to people from TL through IRC. Eventually, just the fact that I was no longer a nobody made me keep on editing.”
This is also part of the social aspect of us humans, we like to belong to groups we respect and we respect people and groups who like what we like. Getting help from the more experienced editors, getting to know new people who are fun and quirky, taking part in one of the Liquipedia Contributors Movie or Gaming nights (never forget the clipboards!) is also part of what makes us wanting to contribute.
5 Recognition for Contributions / Coins
“One day, I noticed that my beer-drinking emoticon in my signature on the forums disappeared, replaced by a coin. When hovering over the coin, the alt text said that it was for 'Liquipedia Contribution.' As I kept editing, this coin began to reproduce asexually, and even change color.”
Besides the coins—which is a pretty good way of showing how much someone has contributed—the shout outs from casters, seeing players using a resource you've helped build, it matters. It feels really awesome. This is more an intermediary benefit though, but it keeps on giving. Whenever people compliment Liquipedia for being updated as soon as games are done, or having tonnes of information, even if you haven't made an edit in a while, you still helped build it and those things makes you feel happy. We also can't forget the Liquichievements that contributors of Liquipedia give to each other in recognition for good work.
Infobox Player 2
by shz
We frantically look for things to improve upon on Liquipedia and templates constitute no exception. The infobox for player pages was one of these things we wanted to revise for a long time. But like it is with most projects, some things need to be left alone for awhile and come back to later. We had discussed a good many ideas over the course of the last couple of months and finally they came into existence. So, What Changed? We re-structured, scrapped, changed, and added new features to the infobox. To give you a quick overview, this is Mvp's old and new infoboxes.
These images are side by side. Infoboxes are always shown single file – to hide their numbers.
The Big Picture
Judge me by my size, do you? Hmm? Hmm.
The first thing you might notice is, that that the picture now covers the entire width of the infobox. This leads to a cleaner, more modern look. And who doesn't like to look at progamers?
New Structure
We also restructured the player information. First you will find his/hers personal information and background. Real name—in the native spelling and then if needed, romanized name—birthday, and home country. Then you have the player information: race, team, individual sponsorship, and alternate IDs. You may also noticed the removal of the nickname column. We did not like the way it was used, as it lead, in most cases, to a collection of random nicknames a caster used once or twice, instead a list of widely accepted and notable nicknames for a player (an good example is God/Ultimate Weapon for Flash. This led to the cluttering of the infobox and therefore less useful. Alternatively, we encourage you to add these well-known nicknames to a players trivia section (preferably well-cited).
Stalk In Style
The old infobox had limited functionality to display relevant links. We only had a handful of sites to link to, and many things had to be done manually. Also, the links were text only and were taking a significant portion of the infobox page, where it really isn't necessary. The solution to having more sites to link to, taking up less space, and making it easier to edit in, was actually pretty simple: Why not use icons? So DivinO made these wonderful icons that we can use to link to all relevant sites.
That way we can finally stalk a players complete online profile and always find the information we are looking for.
Achievements
Badges? We ain't got no badges! We don't need no badges!
Before we had the “Crowning Achievement” section in the infobox. The idea was to highlight a players most important, career wise, achievement. Whether it was their breakout performance or finally that first place they've been working towards for so long. The problem with this was, that’s really hard to actually decide. Which was more important for MarineKing's career? His 2nd place in his breakout tournament 2010 Sony Ericsson Starcraft II Open Season 2, or was it his long awaited first place in a Premier Tournament at the 2012 MLG Pro Circuit/Winter/Arena? We decided to cut this feature and replace it with a showcase of a players premier tournament wins and other notable achievements (like MVP awards or all-kills in team leagues). This way it is always clear what to link there and it is obvious in one glance what the player has achieved.
New Staff
by salle
So since last time we’ve added two new members to our staff, Miwi and ChapatiyaqPTSM. They’ve done some really great work and are very helpful so I’m really glad we have brought them onto the team. Miwi has been doing brackets for us for a long time (that is, more than a year) and he’s been on board and helped us with our Liquipedia for Dota 2 too. Making some new templates for it. Chapatiyaq has been contributing for a long time too. The coolest thing he’s done, in my humble opinion, is a system to help contributors fill out brackets either before an event has started or after a whole bracket is completed. We’ve got plans to incorporate this better into Liquipedia, look forward to that.
We have also added pPingu to trial staff. He’s Swiss, so there’s got to be a cuckoo clock joke in here somewhere, but I’m pretending to rise above it.
And Now for Something Completely Different
by tofucake
LP: Introduce yourself!
Tephus: Hi, I'm Tephus, Dota 2 writer, and LPD [Liquipedia Dota 2] contributor! While I've followed esports for many years, I was a bit of a lurker. Over the past few months though I've been been trying to give back to this amazing community!
LP: You seem overly enthusiastic, but I suppose that will fade with more time on staff. What got you started on TL?
Tephus: Well, I've always followed TL as a fan, and loved Liquipedia and their news coverage. I forget why I actually made my account, as I really didn't use it for at least a year. What triggered me starting to contribute was actually the hype surrounding The International 2012 (the first event I have attended live), and with TL starting their official coverage I thought it would be a perfect time to try and help out.
LP: Three months from starting to contribute to full staff is quite impressive, and 3 silver LP coins. What's your motivation?
Tephus: It's a combination of things. I currently have a decent amount of free time, and esports is a major hobby. I've always had a dream of somehow making a career out of this, and while I realize it's probably unlikely, I really enjoy what I've been doing recently. If somehow this turns into something bigger in the future, that would be amazing, but for now I'm quite happy where I am. My initial LPD contributions were also motivated by dreams of a Liquid`Dota team (mission accomplished!), and generally promoting this game I love.
LP: What's your favorite food?
Tephus: This may sound a little different, but amazing fresh bread. In North America (where I live) in general, the bread is so blah, and a few years ago I lived in Germany for a Summer and it opened my eyes. When bread is made right, its unbelievably good.
LP: And your favorite Dota 2 team? And your second favorite after TL?
Tephus: While I can't deny how excited I am for Liquid`Dota, I more enjoy good games and innovation than simply cheering for a single team. If I had to pick another team I'm currently watching, I would say 4 Friends + Chrillee. They have been experimenting a bit with some interesting drafts, and I feel their play as of late shows they are on the verge of becoming a top team in EU.
LP: Where do you see yourself a year from now?
Tephus: Other than watching Dota 2, I honestly have no clue. I definitely didn't think four months ago that I would be staff on TL now. If I end up going along a normal path, I assume I will have less time contribute, but I doubt I would ever stop. But who knows, maybe I will be able to turn this into something else, I have been surprising myself recently.
LP: Normal path in life or on TL, are you a student, and/or working some sort of "job"?
Tephus: Recently graduated.
LP: Good luck. What degree did you end up with?
Tephus: Thanks. Computer Engineering.
LP: Plans to design new hardware, perhaps you can build a new processor for Flash so he can win everything?
Tephus: My degree was more balanced towards software than hardware, although my biggest internship was designing hardware...
LP: Hopes and dreams for employment then?
Tephus: Well, there is the big dream of some sort of esports employment. But if we are talking more technical work, I'm currently not too picky, as long as the work environment is nice. I've also toyed with the idea of creating Android apps on my own, but my art skills lack so it can be difficult to create something that looks nice. And that would allow me to work from home, which I would probably find enjoyable.
LP: Sorry, I got distracted. I've also forgotten the next question. Please ask yourself a question and then answer it.
Tephus: Tephus, TeamLiquid is offering you a million dollars. Will you take it?
Tephus: Nah, it's k. Put it towards something sexy.
LP: So if you were given $1 million right now, what would you do with it?
Tephus: Pay off all my debts, travel anywhere I wanted for a bit. Save the rest. Or: live of the rest modestly while doing whatever I want with my free time.
LP: How do you think LPD has progressed since launch, and what's it still missing?
Tephus: Well, it now has pretty good coverage on all the tournaments and basic pages for all the big teams. It lacks big time on player pages. It hurts that a huge portion of the EU scene is CIS, and communication is kinda closed off, so we don't know much about the players. It can be tough to create any sort of player page beside of a stub for many of the players... Also, we have decent templates for in depth game coverage (full stats of each game) but actually updating for every game is a huge chore, so it's basically never used.
So in summary: Tournament coverage is pretty strong right now, player coverage bad, team pages are ok.
LP: What kind of things do you prefer to edit?
Tephus: New things. New heroes, new tournaments, new teams, results. I don't really enjoy cleaning up or adding to old stuff.
LP: List 5 reasons why Liquipedia > Writers
Tephus: Anyone can instantly contribute to LP. Puzzle piece glows. I don't get any coins for writing. Writing has deadlines
LP: Just remember that you have editors to fix all your mistakes
Tephus: If something doesn't work you can always yell at miwi.
LP: Which is the better icon: puzzle piece or pen?
Tephus: Well, I've never had a puzzle piece...
LP: But which looks better?
Tephus: Pen, except for the nice glow on the puzzle piece...
LP: Sorry wrong answer. Any final words for the readers?
Tephus: Thanks for reading! Never thought I would be interviewed for Liquipedia! If you are at all interesting in helping out, please don't hesitate, all you need to do is log in with your TL account and you can edit away!
LP: Thanks for your time, traitor!
If You Done It, It Ain’t Bragging
by shz
We just read about some insight why people edit Liquipedia, but other than the obvious reason, we always cherish thanks and shout-outs from our ESPORTS celebrities and fans. But to be serious here for a moment, most of us do this to contribute and give back to this community. Whether we love the game or the people, we want to make our little bubble a bit better and getting recognition from the people we do this for is always a special feeling. So please enjoy these moments of recognition and random fun with us and let us brag a little.
@jacquelinesg @LiquipediaNet is my best friend. #SC2
Whoever did edit my liquipedia page. I just wanted to say Thank you, it's really well written MaNa
@followgrubby @ApolloSC2 bly won WCS ukraine @ApolloSC2 @followgrubby fml I forgot, damn liquidpedia Bly/Results @AdebisiSC @ApolloSC2 @followgrubby only one d in liquipedia.
@AdebisiSC Teamliquid is down, no Liquipedia, casters are fucked. @AdebisiSC
I think the commentators managed to open like 30 Liquipedia tabs while it was briefly up so we should be ok.
If you've been inspired to make your mark on Liquipedia, remember that all you need to make a contribution is a tiny bit of time, the will, and an account on Teamliquid.net. We need more help with our Dota 2 wiki as Tephus stated, but not only for the esports coverage (player pages), we need help with the hero pages too. So if you want to support Liquipedia, and the fact that Liquipedia is growing outside of StarCraft, you know what to do.
Thanks for reading, and see you on the wiki! - Liquipedia staff
I remember, I once updated a result during IEM Singapore and I felt that rush you talk about never really had a spark for it though, someone usually beats me to it.
All the code stuff is the only reason I still haven't contributed yet, wish there was a guide on how to use it and every function of liquipedia. Anyways gj all who did contributed! Very nice to read articles and and the results are always really fast.
On December 24 2012 07:57 Mariosatr wrote: I remember, I once updated a result during IEM Singapore and I felt that rush you talk about never really had a spark for it though, someone usually beats me to it.
That's why you be a total pimp and have 8 streams open at once and then another 16 tabs ready to update with every possible combination. Dedication yo.
On December 24 2012 08:05 moskonia wrote: All the code stuff is the only reason I still haven't contributed yet, wish there was a guide on how to use it and every function of liquipedia. Anyways gj all who did contributed! Very nice to read articles and and the results are always really fast.
Well if you come to our IRC linked on the main page of LP as well as in my article we'll be happy to help you. And if you search around you can find templates for pretty much everything you want. It doesn't take long before the code becomes second nature as its pretty intuitive.
This article is all part of hot bid's master plan, so he can rest on his millions while most of the site is run by volunteers who only want e-recognition and virtual coins. Not that I can blame him, but I'm always fascinated by how many are willing to work for free while others profit greatly from their work, just in the name of e-sports. TL isn't the only company to do that as Dreamhack runs entirely off volunteers from what I've read. It's a genius plan really and if companies in the non esports world could profit off a legion of volunteers, they would do the same.
On December 24 2012 08:27 Canucklehead wrote: This article is all part of hot bid's master plan, so he can rest on his millions while most of the site is run by volunteers who only want e-recognition and virtual coins. Not that I can blame him, but I'm always fascinated by how many are willing to work for free while others profit greatly from their work, just in the name of e-sports. TL isn't the only company to do that as Dreamhack runs entirely off volunteers from what I've read.
Only 0.03% of the people using Liquipedia contribute... There's no one about to make millions off of Liquipedia.
On December 24 2012 08:27 Canucklehead wrote: This article is all part of hot bid's master plan, so he can rest on his millions while most of the site is run by volunteers who only want e-recognition and virtual coins. Not that I can blame him, but I'm always fascinated by how many are willing to work for free while others profit greatly from their work, just in the name of e-sports. TL isn't the only company to do that as Dreamhack runs entirely off volunteers from what I've read. It's a genius plan really and if companies in the non esports world could profit off a legion of volunteers, they would do the same.
You nailed it. Such a well kept secret. And you managed to dismantle it with such ease & grace!
On December 24 2012 08:27 Canucklehead wrote: This article is all part of hot bid's master plan, so he can rest on his millions while most of the site is run by volunteers who only want e-recognition and virtual coins. Not that I can blame him, but I'm always fascinated by how many are willing to work for free while others profit greatly from their work, just in the name of e-sports. TL isn't the only company to do that as Dreamhack runs entirely off volunteers from what I've read.
Only 0.03% of the people using Liquipedia contribute... There's no one about to make millions off of Liquipedia.
Not just talking about liquipedia. Talking about most of the things on the site like translations, articles etc. Isn't it pretty well known TL is run mostly by volunteers? Isn't it a badge of honour TL always likes to talk about saying they got tons of volunteers that help make the site what it is? Pretty sure I've read that in interviews from TL staff before.
On December 24 2012 08:05 moskonia wrote: All the code stuff is the only reason I still haven't contributed yet, wish there was a guide on how to use it and every function of liquipedia. Anyways gj all who did contributed! Very nice to read articles and and the results are always really fast.
its not to hard, if you cant code (I cant and had the same reason not to do anything as you) just use preview before you post and if its result look at how others are made mostly its just either copy something or change a number really
On December 24 2012 09:03 Sjokola wrote: 0,03% ?! Much of the time when I try to update live results someone beat me to it.
for the big tournaments yes, for the smaller ones and show matches. not really. I think results is the ones that most people do as well. other information is harder to write and come by
On December 24 2012 09:03 Sjokola wrote: 0,03% ?! Much of the time when I try to update live results someone beat me to it. Edit: how Many editors are there at this moment?
On December 24 2012 09:03 Sjokola wrote: 0,03% ?! Much of the time when I try to update live results someone beat me to it.
for the big tournaments yes, for the smaller ones and show matches. not really. I think results is the ones that most people do as well. other information is harder to write and come by
I mean also when im doing uninteresring amateur iptl matches. But you're probably right
On December 24 2012 09:03 Sjokola wrote: 0,03% ?! Much of the time when I try to update live results someone beat me to it.
for the big tournaments yes, for the smaller ones and show matches. not really. I think results is the ones that most people do as well. other information is harder to write and come by
I mean also when im doing uninteresring amateur iptl matches. But you're probably right
On December 24 2012 09:03 Sjokola wrote: 0,03% ?! Much of the time when I try to update live results someone beat me to it. Edit: how Many editors are there at this moment?
On December 24 2012 09:03 Sjokola wrote: 0,03% ?! Much of the time when I try to update live results someone beat me to it. Edit: how Many editors are there at this moment?
I have 946 edits in the last 30 days. I need to get out more TT EDIT: You become editor after a certain amount of time, generally more than a month with regular editing. The wiki uses auto promote, so if it's slow like it was for me then sometimes staff will promote you themselves to editor.
On December 24 2012 09:03 Sjokola wrote: 0,03% ?! Much of the time when I try to update live results someone beat me to it. Edit: how Many editors are there at this moment?
Yay, Liquipedia FIGHTING! I remember the first time I updated, I messed up and felt bad about it so I never edited again. Hehe, one day, I'll start again. For now, Thank you Liquipedia!
On December 24 2012 09:34 RiceAgainst wrote: Yay, Liquipedia FIGHTING! I remember the first time I updated, I messed up and felt bad about it so I never edited again. Hehe, one day, I'll start again. For now, Thank you Liquipedia!
On December 24 2012 09:03 Sjokola wrote: 0,03% ?! Much of the time when I try to update live results someone beat me to it.
for the big tournaments yes, for the smaller ones and show matches. not really. I think results is the ones that most people do as well. other information is harder to write and come by
I mean also when im doing uninteresring amateur iptl matches. But you're probably right
On December 24 2012 08:27 Canucklehead wrote: This article is all part of hot bid's master plan, so he can rest on his millions while most of the site is run by volunteers who only want e-recognition and virtual coins. Not that I can blame him, but I'm always fascinated by how many are willing to work for free while others profit greatly from their work, just in the name of e-sports. TL isn't the only company to do that as Dreamhack runs entirely off volunteers from what I've read. It's a genius plan really and if companies in the non esports world could profit off a legion of volunteers, they would do the same.
Everything you see exists together in a delicate balance. As a TL member, you need to understand that balance and respect all the components, from the silent lurker to the energetic LP editor.
"But, wait, doesn't Hot_Bid get paid for the work we put in?" you asked.
Yes, Canucklehead, but let me explain. When we edit, our edits become the content, and the content needs a server. Besides, when he doesn't have to worry about LP, Hot_Bid can go out and make awesome interviews for us to watch for free. And with all this free stuff, visitors come to watch and provide us with the means to continue to have free servers. And so we are all connnected in the great Circle of ESPORTS.
This last dreamhack was the first time I went into hardcore live updating on the wiki. I've done a whole bunch of work, but I've never had four streams open, a binarybrackets page open, and two LP windows open at once. And it went on for an entire day.
Feels great to be a contributor to Liquipedia. After relying on it for so long I decided to contribute myself about a year back. No regrets. Awesome article!
If what I do in the Teamliquid forums is called stalking, I don't want to know what I do on Liquipedia is called. Most used site of the year. Lovely work as always!
Oh, I want me some coins too! So far I've been trying to update some results, usually it looks like race and I lose, guess I watch too big tournaments. Or I wanted to update some unit info after patch and it was already done, you guys are simply too good! Maybe I find a way to contribute more regularly.
If anyone wants coins fast, go to the BW Liquipedia and edit a bunch of old Proleague matches to get them complete. That was the bulk of my edits before school took up too much free time.
TLDR, I am to drunk to read more than on sentece. So Liquipedia is the most awesome wiki when it comes to Esport. you are more live then the tournaments with their scores. So keep the work up.
YOU ARE AWESOME!!!.
you are the No. #1 when it comes to results in sc2 or dota2
On December 24 2012 16:12 CoR wrote: winter time is also not for germany xD 8am and we have +9°C outside and it will be to +15°C today ... what a christmas
Here is -30 degrees :D No, yesterday was, now only -20 degrees.
I don´t know what Esports would be without Liquipedia, you guys are play a gbig role of keeping Esports alive, because the way to find the official bracket site, is mostly very complicated and everybody knows the LP design and your beatiful and incredible big database!
On December 24 2012 16:12 CoR wrote: winter time is also not for germany xD 8am and we have +9°C outside and it will be to +15°C today ... what a christmas
-.- Sadly noone seems to care about the stratagy section. I wouldnt be suprised if the dota 2 wiki gains more content. Since its much easier to write stratagy for 1 hero.
I would really like to contribute, but sadly there's nothing i can help with unless maybe some fun trivia. I'm not known with most player's achievements and stuff
On December 24 2012 20:03 kollin wrote: Guys you better find the Easter Egg in the news article.
Are you talking about the little beer smiley man?
Well more what he links to, but yes.
On December 24 2012 23:07 fenrysk wrote: i forget which pill Salle gave me but the rabbit hole is deep.
The red pill, clearly.
On December 24 2012 23:56 Big-t wrote: Tzzz anyone who says bread is shit, never ate some real good non industrially produced bread.
Completely agree, I bake my own bread, sometimes with sour-dough sometimes with brewer's yeast.
On December 25 2012 00:05 CrtBalorda wrote: -.- Sadly noone seems to care about the stratagy section. I wouldnt be suprised if the dota 2 wiki gains more content. Since its much easier to write stratagy for 1 hero.
I don't think this is necessarily true, my hope is that both wikis grows in strategic content. You can for example copy guides written on the SC2 Strategy forum on TL to Liquipedia if the builds are based on competitive play. However there's not that many people who want to invest the time in writing down guides rather than spend the time practising and improving themselves. (that are high enough in skill level to understand many of the nuances of the build)
On December 25 2012 01:40 Silencioseu wrote: I would really like to contribute, but sadly there's nothing i can help with unless maybe some fun trivia. I'm not known with most player's achievements and stuff
Most of the stuff people contribute is not original content. For example if you want to help improve a player page, read/watch interviews with the player, sum that up into an article together with information from the achievements/results/TLPD to tell the story of that player. We like well sourced player articles.
big shot out to all the contributers of liquipedia! your're doing an awesome job! everytime i need to know anything about bw or the korean names of pro gamers i never have to google it, so thank you for making my life a little easier merry christmas to all the tl members/staff and community of teamliquid
Nothing like trying to edit some results and having the same changes made on 5 different pages to make you realise how much of a noob you are at Liquipedia.
Awesome write up, unfortunately, the only player I have semi-access to is KomA from iS, and that sporadically through his brother...
I may start going through and fixing little spelling/syntax errors and maybe an update for a tournament here and there, but I can't catch most tournaments live, bleh...