Guide to writing wiki requests

Hello there! I bet you're excited to request a wiki on Miraheze. Before you do, however, it's important to know how to write a wiki request. In this guide, we'll follow the process of writing a request. Before we start, however, we should review what should and shouldn't be in a wiki request.

Before you write a wiki request
Before you request your wiki, make sure there isn't already a wiki with a similar or identical purpose. If there is, contribute to that wiki instead. If the wiki is closed, you may adopt it.

Anatomy of a wiki request
You can request a wiki here. On that page, you'll see the following form:
 * Subdomain (subdomain.miraheze.org): A text box in which you can put your wiki's subdomain.
 * Wiki name: A text box in which you can name your wiki.
 * Language: A drop-down menu in which you select the language your wiki is in.
 * Category: A drop-down menu in which you select the category of your wiki. Make sure you choose a category that best fits your wiki. You can choose from the following categories:


 * Private wiki (not readable by everyone; only readable by users given the member or sysop groups): Check this box to make your wiki accessible only by members and admins.
 * Will this wiki's main subject(s) be about living people? By checking this box, you acknowledge that people are the topic of your wiki.
 * The purpose of this wiki is... This is a drop-down menu in which you can select the purpose of your wiki to help it be found more easily in WikiDiscover search. If your wiki doesn't fit well with any of these, select "None of the above". If you select this, a wiki creator may assign one closest to the scope you present, or you may have a harder time getting the request approved.
 * Reason: This is the most important input. In this one, you describe your wiki's purpose, topic, and scope. If wiki creators believe that your wiki may cause hate, they may decline the request even if you have described a sufficent purpose, topic, and scope.

What a wiki request should contain
These are what wiki requests should contain:
 * A clear statement of the wiki's purpose (ex. "My wiki will be about documenting events that happened on Fandom for easy access in the future.")
 * What type of content the wiki will contain (ex. "It will contain transcripts of conversations that users involved in the events had, as well as a chronology of the series of events.")
 * Its scope (ex. "The events documented on this wiki will be important, such as a massive vandalism wave on a popular wiki.")
 * A subdomain that is related to the wiki's purpose (remember to fill out subdomain in subdomain box!) (ex. "fandomarchives.miraheze.org") Note: the domain needs to be relevant to the topic, avoid being too short/generic, and should not overlap with an existing domain.''

What wiki requests should not contain
Never put any of this in your wiki request: Wiki requests containing those will be declined.
 * Content unrelated to the wiki you are requesting, known as filler (ex. "Me and my friends played Minecraft.")
 * A generic subdomain (ex. "wiki7.miraheze.org")
 * Spam requests (ex. "uthfazrsfhfjfit7dt")
 * Any content that violates the content policy (ex. "I would like to request a wiki to advertise my business.")
 * Wikis that are setup solely for harassment (ex. "This wiki will expose horrible people and/or users for the purpose of harassment.")

What to put in "reason"
The following are good and bad examples of what to put into the "reason" field in the wiki request form. Good examples are marked with green while bad examples are marked with red.

Good examples
This wiki will document about the online video sharing service YouTube. It will document its history, its content creators, its achievements, and the videos hosted on it. Most of its pages would be pages about popular youtubers, popular videos, and important events. This request has a clear purpose (documenting YouTube, its features, and the people who upload videos on it) and scope (only popular YouTubers and videos and important events)

This wiki will be all about wikis. It will document wikis with at least 50 pages as well as wiki farms and wiki engines, all from an encyclopedic point of view. This request may be short, but it does its job. In only 2 sentences, it described the wiki's purpose, topic, and scope.

This wiki will be about an imaginary world where the only living things on it were turtles. It would document about imaginary villages, cities, species, and other things in the imaginary world. The imaginary world would have high technology advancement. Another slightly short request, but again, it does its job. It described the wiki's purpose (This wiki will be about an imaginary world), topic (where the only living things on it were turtles), and scope (It would document about imaginary villages, cities, species, and other things in the imaginary world...).

I'd like to create this wiki to save notes for my class. The notes will be general notes such as interesting things and things I want to study about later. It would have lots of notes and some other stuff, such as some interesting or hard questions. (Visiblity: Private) An average amount of purpose and scope. Granted, not much else can be said for a private wiki, but the request is still slightly unclear. What class is this reason talking about?

Bad examples
This wiki will be about wikis considered bad by the general community. It will outline the reasons why it's considered bad and the redeeming qualities, if any, it has. Pages about users will not be allowed on this wiki. Although this request has a sufficent purpose and topic, it is likely to cause drama and hate.

This wiki will document about YouTube and its creators. Not very clear. Will the wiki be about all YouTube creators or just popular ones? Will it document about hated youtubers or not? If yes, will it violate the content policy or it will establish rules to delete everything content policy-violating?

Recently, Fandom has been closing innocent wikis for no reason, so we'd like to host our wiki on Miraheze to be able to customize skins. We'd like this wiki to document an MMO game. May seem long, but uses the fandom part as a filler. The actual content is "We'd like this wiki to document an MMO game". The MMO game isn't even specified.

A wiki for my imaginary world. Though imaginary world wikis generally have a short description, this is not enough at all.

Example request
Now that we've reviewed the basics of wiki requests, let's follow the wiki requesting process of a user who, one day, decided to request a wiki. Here is that user's first wiki request: When the user submitted it, however, the request was declined. What was wrong with the wiki request? There were several things: The user didn't give up on the wiki, however! You can edit your wiki request to add details. The user thought about how the wiki request could be improved and made changes. Here is the user's second request: This request was approved! It had several major changes:
 * Subdomain (subdomain.miraheze.org): fandomarchives
 * Wiki name: Archives
 * Language: en - English
 * Category: History
 * Private wiki (not readable by everyone; only readable by users given the member or sysop groups): No
 * Will this wiki's main subject(s) be about living people? No
 * The purpose of this wiki is... Documentation (software) wiki
 * Reason: I want to archive fandom events
 * 1) The user did not type out the subdomain correctly. Remember, your subdomain should be in the form subdomain.miraheze.org.
 * 2) The wiki's name didn't fit well with the wiki. A name such as "Fandom Archives" would be better.
 * 3) The user chose a category that didn't fit well with the wiki's purpose. Granted, no category fits well with the wiki's purpose, so the user would've been better off selecting "Uncategorized".
 * 4) The purpose of the wiki the user chose didn't fit well with the wiki's actual purpose. The closest purpose would be "Encyclopedia (specialized) wiki", since it documents events that happened in Fandom. The user could've also chosen "None of the above".
 * 5) The user didn't give enough details about the wiki. "I want to archive fandom events" says nothing about the wiki's topic and scope. A better reason would be the following: "My wiki will be about documenting events that happened on Fandom for easy access in the future. The events documented on this wiki will be important, such as a massive vandalism wave on a popular wiki. It will contain primary sources for accuracy, such as transcripts of conversations that users involved in the events had. It will also have chronologies of series of events."
 * Subdomain (subdomain.miraheze.org): fandomarchives.miraheze.org
 * Wiki name: Fandom Archives
 * Language: en - English
 * Category: Uncategorized
 * Private wiki (not readable by everyone; only readable by users given the member or sysop groups): No
 * Will this wiki's main subject(s) be about living people? No
 * The purpose of this wiki is... Encyclopedia (specialized) wiki
 * Reason: My wiki will be about documenting events that happened on Fandom for easy access in the future. The events documented on this wiki will be important, such as a massive vandalism wave on a popular wiki. It will contain primary sources for accuracy, such as transcripts of conversations that users involved in the events had. It will also have chronologies of series of events.
 * 1) The subdomain was changed to an appropriate one.
 * 2) The user changed the category and purpose to fit better with the wiki.
 * 3) The user expanded on the reason, adding what type of content the wiki will have and its purpose.

My wiki request was declined! What should I do?
Don't panic! Think about why your request was declined (for example, your subdomain could be invalid or your reason wasn't specific enough) and edit the wiki request to improve it. When you fix the request, you can easily be approved for a wiki.

Examples of good wiki requests
These are some examples of good wiki requests. You can use them as an example or template to your wiki request.