User:Porq

A little about me
I used to play guild wars, and was a big fan of how useful, complete, and user friendly the official and player-ran wikis were. When I started playing DDO, I was dismayed to see that most of the useful game knowledge was locked away in the forums, which made it hard to find and navigate to the information I wanted. That's how I learned most of what I know about DDO outside of the game itself, it was an arduous process though and I wish I had the benefit of a wiki to help me starting out. It's in this spirit that I want to help make the DDOWiki a better resource. I don't have much experience with editing a wiki, so I suppose I'll have to figure it out as I go.

Things I'd like to do:

Take in-game, equipped-on-character screenshots of unique(named) items and put them on their stat pages. Aesthetics are important to me, so I typically like to see things before I get them or base a decision of what to get on how it looks. I know there are others out there that wish there was a resource for this too. Porq 16:10, June 12, 2011 (EDT)
 * Dig up remaining saved armors on Thelanis and Orien later.
 * Figure out something to do with multiple body feat images for unique docents.

something
Special:SpecialPages

Female
Shamelessly lifted from Crest Set



Save for later http://forums.ddo.com/showthread.php?t=326503

Template:Post

Template:Home/Gallery means any following content is visible and puts text in a box text
 * px looks like it forces image widths

File: and Image: seem to both work fine





and are the proper way to put something that is preformated into a box, which means that it will keep all of the white spaces like double spaces and carriage returns in the box. File: is adds features on top of Image: that this wiki doesn't seem to use. "##px" is the width of an item in pixels, unless using ##x##px, then it is width x length. gives all the details and usage for images on the wiki.. ShoeMaker 23:03, June 20, 2011 (EDT)
 * Actually... Anything between  is called a comment, and both need to be present for it to work