

In one beach episode, she has a one-sided conversation with Sakaki about dolphins, sea lions, and hemorrhoids. In Azumanga Daioh, Osaka doesn't just Wiki-walk, she Wiki-pole-vaults.Here on TV Tropes, tropers are asked to not leave links to pages on or off the wiki in place of contextualized examples because (among other reasons) tropers are incredibly prone to the Wiki Walk.īaseball > Broken bones > Skeleton > Ghosts > Things that disappear > David Copperfield > Burned out on magic > Reveals how tricks work > Birthday People have turned this into a game! It's called The Wiki Game, and the objective is to get from one article to a completely different article in the fewest number of clicks.įor an academic paper on the subject (although possibly not a peer-reviewed one - there is no title of an academic journal displayed note Although it was presented at the 2009 Workshop on Graph-based Methods for Natural Language Processing), go here. Thankfully however there is the ever-helpful "open in new tab" function on your browser.

Doing it intentionally for fun is known as "playing Wiki Tag." Often cannot be recreated, as anyone who has spotted an interesting trope en route, planned to come back to it, and then forgotten what it was, will attest. Definitely an example of Truth in Television. Refers to how you could, in two or three links, end up at a trope seemingly unrelated to the page you started from.
Tiny rails wiki archive#
If there is a database involved it will usually overlap with an Archive Binge, and is one of the reasons TV Tropes Will Ruin Your Life.Ī Sub-Trope of this is the Halfway Plot Switch when the plot seems to do this. This is most likely responsible for the stranger half of any Are You Pondering What I'm Pondering? moment. A Cloud Cuckoo Lander is particularly susceptible to these, though we mostly only hear the end result.
