Uncyclopedia: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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The site's guidelines and rules are written in a truthful and non-satirical, but still humorous tone, the best example of which is “[[Hypocritical Humor|How To Be Funny and Not Just Stupid]]”.
The site's guidelines and rules are written in a truthful and non-satirical, but still humorous tone, the best example of which is “[[Hypocritical Humor|How To Be Funny and Not Just Stupid]]”.


Portions of Uncyclopedia were hosted on [[Wikia|FANDOM/Wikia]] until May 2019, when they were evicted for supposedly violating [[Censorship Bureau|Wikia policy]]. The affected projects (including English, French, Spanish, Italian, Polish and Russian among others) were moved to independent hosting. The English-language Uncyclopedia can now be found [https://uncyclopedia.ca/wiki/Main_Page here]. Another independent version of the site was set up in January 2013 in response to [[Content Warnings|Wikia's content warnings]] and [[Moral Guardians|censorship]], and much of the community moved there; it can be found [http://en.uncyclopedia.co here]. The “good” articles (so judged by Uncyclopedia users) are listed [https://uncyclopedia.ca/wiki/Uncyclopedia:Best_of here] (original) and [https://en.uncyclopedia.co/wiki/Uncyclopedia:Best_of here] (fork).
Portions of Uncyclopedia were hosted on [[Wikia|FANDOM/Wikia]] until May 2019, when they were evicted for supposedly violating [[Censorship Bureau|Wikia policy]]. The affected projects (including English, French, Spanish, Italian, Polish and Russian among others) were moved to independent hosting. The English-language Uncyclopedia can now be found [https://uncyclopedia.ca/wiki/Main_Page here]. Another independent version of the site, to which much of the community moved in January 2013 in response to [[Content Warnings|Wikia's content warnings]] and [[Moral Guardians|censorship]], can be found [http://en.uncyclopedia.co here]. The “good” articles (so judged by Uncyclopedia users) are listed [https://uncyclopedia.ca/wiki/Uncyclopedia:Best_of here] (original) and [https://en.uncyclopedia.co/wiki/Uncyclopedia:Best_of here] (fork).


International editions are notorious for sometimes [[Woolseyism|creating new puns for their titles]]. [http://desencyclopedie.org/wiki/Accueil Désencyclopedie] (“discyclopedia”), the French version, has a pair of dice (“dés” in French) as logo, the Norwegian version is called [http://ikkepedia.org/wiki/Forside Ikkepedia] (“notpedia”), the Russian versions are Absurdopedia ([http://absurdopedia.net here] and [http://absurdopedia.wiki here]), the Spanish version is [http://inciclopedia.org/wiki/Inciclopedia:Portada Inciclopedia] <ref>(It was [https://web.archive.org/web/20160102184032/http://www.frikipedia.es/friki/Portada Frikipedia] until a certain Spanish copyright organization [[Frivolous Lawsuit|did a massive legal bullying upon it]], and its mantle was passed to Inciclopedia. For a while since then, both existed, but each one catered to different audiences.)</ref> and the Danish version is called “[http://spademanns.wikia.com/wiki/Forside Spademanns Leksikon]”, a pun between respected Danish encyclopedia Lademanns Leksikon and “spade”, Danish slang for “retard”. In the Mandarin version, the name is still transliterated from Wikipedia, but the first word used here also means “fake”. [http://la.uncyclopedia.info/wiki/Pagina_prima Necyclopaedia], the [[Altum Videtur|Latin version]], simply transposes the first two letters of “encyclopaedia”<ref>archaic alternate spelling</ref> to form the Latin word ''ne'', “not”. The Italian version is called [http://nonciclopedia.org/wiki/Pagina_principale Nonciclopedia], basically the same pun as the original one. The Japanese version is called [[Gratuitous English|Ansaikuropedia]], from the katakana rendering of Uncyclopedia and is notorious for such bashing of [[Seiyuu]] and [[Anime]] that in some occasions surpasses that of [[Wretched Hive|Encyclopedia Dramatica]].
International editions are notorious for sometimes [[Woolseyism|creating new puns for their titles]]. [http://desencyclopedie.org/wiki/Accueil Désencyclopedie] (“discyclopedia”), the French version, has a pair of dice (“dés” in French) as logo, the Norwegian version is called [http://ikkepedia.org/wiki/Forside Ikkepedia] (“notpedia”), the Russian versions are Absurdopedia ([http://absurdopedia.net here] and [http://absurdopedia.wiki here]), the Spanish version is [http://inciclopedia.org/wiki/Inciclopedia:Portada Inciclopedia] <ref>(It was [https://web.archive.org/web/20160102184032/http://www.frikipedia.es/friki/Portada Frikipedia] until a certain Spanish copyright organization [[Frivolous Lawsuit|did a massive legal bullying upon it]], and its mantle was passed to Inciclopedia. For a while since then, both existed, but each one catered to different audiences.)</ref> and the Danish version is called “[http://spademanns.wikia.com/wiki/Forside Spademanns Leksikon]”, a pun between respected Danish encyclopedia Lademanns Leksikon and “spade”, Danish slang for “retard”. In the Mandarin version, the name is still transliterated from Wikipedia, but the first word used here also means “fake”. [http://la.uncyclopedia.info/wiki/Pagina_prima Necyclopaedia], the [[Altum Videtur|Latin version]], simply transposes the first two letters of “encyclopaedia”<ref>archaic alternate spelling</ref> to form the Latin word ''ne'', “not”. The Italian version is called [http://nonciclopedia.org/wiki/Pagina_principale Nonciclopedia], basically the same pun as the original one. The Japanese version is called [[Gratuitous English|Ansaikuropedia]], from the katakana rendering of Uncyclopedia and is notorious for such bashing of [[Seiyuu]] and [[Anime]] that in some occasions surpasses that of [[Wretched Hive|Encyclopedia Dramatica]].

Revision as of 16:04, 16 July 2019


The poor, meme-ridden "comedy" website Uncyclopedia is the stuff of Internet legend and infamy. The site, which is thought to have originated in 1860 as an American imperialist tool for global domination, is now a multi-national effort and is seen as the best of its kind by some. It currently specializes in tedious mockery of perceived competitors and petty in-fighting, with much of the content seen as mass-produced junk. Yet, there remains a peculiar fondness for some of the articles by fanatics.

The Other Wiki. No, the Other Other Wiki.

Affectionate Parody of Wikipedia that would like to be to wikis what The Onion is to newspapers. It advertises itself as the “content-free encyclopedia”.

The site's guidelines and rules are written in a truthful and non-satirical, but still humorous tone, the best example of which is “How To Be Funny and Not Just Stupid”.

Portions of Uncyclopedia were hosted on FANDOM/Wikia until May 2019, when they were evicted for supposedly violating Wikia policy. The affected projects (including English, French, Spanish, Italian, Polish and Russian among others) were moved to independent hosting. The English-language Uncyclopedia can now be found here. Another independent version of the site, to which much of the community moved in January 2013 in response to Wikia's content warnings and censorship, can be found here. The “good” articles (so judged by Uncyclopedia users) are listed here (original) and here (fork).

International editions are notorious for sometimes creating new puns for their titles. Désencyclopedie (“discyclopedia”), the French version, has a pair of dice (“dés” in French) as logo, the Norwegian version is called Ikkepedia (“notpedia”), the Russian versions are Absurdopedia (here and here), the Spanish version is Inciclopedia [1] and the Danish version is called “Spademanns Leksikon”, a pun between respected Danish encyclopedia Lademanns Leksikon and “spade”, Danish slang for “retard”. In the Mandarin version, the name is still transliterated from Wikipedia, but the first word used here also means “fake”. Necyclopaedia, the Latin version, simply transposes the first two letters of “encyclopaedia”[2] to form the Latin word ne, “not”. The Italian version is called Nonciclopedia, basically the same pun as the original one. The Japanese version is called Ansaikuropedia, from the katakana rendering of Uncyclopedia and is notorious for such bashing of Seiyuu and Anime that in some occasions surpasses that of Encyclopedia Dramatica.

Let it be noted that TV Tropes listed them before they listed TV Tropes. And as far as we know, All The Tropes has so far escaped their notice.

Tropes used in Uncyclopedia include:
  1. (It was Frikipedia until a certain Spanish copyright organization did a massive legal bullying upon it, and its mantle was passed to Inciclopedia. For a while since then, both existed, but each one catered to different audiences.)
  2. archaic alternate spelling