Minecraft Wiki (website)

Creation of the wiki and painful beginnings (June 2009 - October 2010)
On June 16, 2009, a Minecraft player by the name of citricsquid has had created a site called Minecraft Forums. This was his reaction to the official Minecraft forum created by Notch, which was flood with spam and wasn't really focused on.

A day later, Quatroking joined the Minecraft Forums as the 10th member. It was him, who suggested Minecraft Wiki and since citricsquid agreed and decided to create the wiki, Quatroking became the first full-time admin on Minecraft Wiki.

At that time, the wiki was called "Minepedia - The Minecraft Wiki!" , but was referred to as "Minepedia" and hosted at "minecraftwiki.net".

The wiki wasn't very different from other Minecraft wikis. There were tons of those on internet already and some of the bigger ones would get created in next few weeks. However, the connection between wiki, forums and Notch were key factors, which affected the wiki's popularity.

Unfortunately, the things didn't go well. At the same time as both sites were created, citricsquid has had left the high school and didn't have enough money to afford hosting any longer, and so on August 3, 2009, forums and the wiki went offline. After 3 weeks, community member aera (a person known for creating a first ever custom server "myne!") offered to cover the costs and on August 28, 2009, Minecraft Forums and Minepedia are online again.

After that, both forums and Minecraft Wiki started to become essential part of Minecraft community. And as the game continued to grow, the forum and the wiki did so too, doubling in size every 2 months.

In July 2010, Minecraft Wiki became an unofficial place to report bugs. The admins and editors created and maintained a bug tracker currently located on Minecraft Wiki:Issues. While it wasn't official, it was a standard

In August 2010, the sites outgrew the hosting that aera was providing and needed a new plan. This resulted in community member WedTM stepping forward and offered the hardware. Unfortunately, both forums and wiki were growing just too quickly, and it became an issue in just few weeks again.

The September 2010 was a very difficult month. In a single month, the daily views quintupled from 200,000 to 1,000,000. Until this point, there were no ads or donations, but as the hardware has been outgrewed and the bill for the hosting has reached $2000, the administration team turned to the community for donations. In one week, $3500 were raised, enough to rent a better hardware. To achieve more stability, ads were introduced shortly after. This meant there had to be a legal entity responsible for the sites, and thus a company "Redstone Wire, Ltd" was formed and incorporated on September 30, 2010.

The next month was more of the stable months. However, the sites were still growing rapidly, meaning the stability issues were returning very often. Additionally, this was still just a volunteers running the site, which meant lot of the stuff was on the shoulders of community and admins, who were managing a site as big as StackOverflow, which has been becoming messier every single day. For example, the main point for discussion was a talk page of the wiki's main page. However, the discussion was mixing up with the discussion about the main page itself, which would make the archives very difficult to follow.

That was a motivation to create and maintain a Community portal page, which was created on October 14. Originally, the portal wasn't meant to exist at all, as the page was created just to inform administrators, that they link to it from sidebar. Later that week, the portal transformed into a place to list two links, one to forums and second to Minecraft.net, and since October 20, 2010, it has officially become the place for discussing the wiki, replacing Main Page's talk (whose content was moved to the community portal the following week).

Wiki under Curse.com (November 2010 - December 2012)
In fall 2010, the wiki space was experiencing one of the biggest events in its history. Up until then, 99.9% of non-Wikimedia Foundation wiki space (known also as Fan-wiki space) was dominated by the wiki platform Wikia (today known as Fandom and it is a wiki platform you're just browsing on). Wikia's newest fixed-width skin, Oasis, summoned hate from various wikis, which meant people may have intentions to leave Wikia, which in turn was a good time for other companies to offer their own wiki services. One of those companies which took advatage was Curse.

Curse started as a database of World of Warcraft mods, but by the 2009, they've expanded to other areas, such as forums for example. It was at that time Curse decided to host their first wiki. Surprisingly, it wasn't their first touch with wiki space either. In 2007, they had a short-lived partnership with Wikia, which lasted for just 5 months, but it was enough for them to realize there's a space for something like a wiki farm. After seeing decent success with the wikis they were hosting, they've decided to expand. But the process was still very slowly, as by the end of October 2010, it had just 7 wikis, which is meant they were more of a joke hosting service than a wiki farm. But at the same time, a drama raised on Wikia and so Curse took the stage. They were now looking for including every wiki.

So at the beginning of November 2010, the president of Curse, Donovan Duncan, reached out to citricsquid and the team. The deal was that Curse would acquire sites under "Redstone Wire Ltd" and would hire citricsquid, aera and WedTM. This happened by the November 15, 2010, since when the site was owned by Curse.

Few weeks later in December 2010, "Minepedia" had to be renamed to "Minecraft Wiki", since the owners of domain "minepedia.net" has raised a legal issue, which concluded that the wiki could no longer be named as "Minepedia". However, the transition was very slow, and references were being changed throughout the 2011.

In months following, Minecraft Wiki improved its management pages. In late December 2010, Community portal was transformed to be an actual useful page for users, followed by creation of Admin noticeboard in early January 2011..

In June 2011, Minecraft Wiki community, for the first time in its existence, got into an argument with Curse. This was due to Curse adding a sidebar for some promotional materials and later ads. Despite the protests and repeated rants from community members, the sidebar remained until early 2013, when the wiki migrated to Gamepedia platform.

September 2011 marked closure of. Since then, Minecraft Wiki is the biggest wiki about Minecraft with no significant competition to challenge it.

In August 2012, Minecraft Wiki has decided to change its wiki logo and header. The header has been implemented right away, although it took a year for the logo to be finally changed on September 24, 2013.

Migration to Gamepedia and wiki's first golden age (December 2012 - August 2016)
With the number of wikis Curse was hosting raising rapidly, more and more problems came along with upgrading them. Since all of the wikis ran on their own MediaWiki cores, updating meant technical issues for a longer period of time. Additionally, due how wikis were on their own URLs, features like site-wide logging could not exist and SEO was per-wiki, which wasn't ideal, if somebody wanted to compete with Wikia.

That was an inspiration of Gamepedia wiki farm, powered by "Hydra" wiki engine. This introduced a single MediaWiki core, easily manageable extensions, site-wide logging and it made Gamepedia wikis stronger in SEO. The move was completed in August 2013. As an added bonus, Curse decided to get rid of the controversial right sidebar the wiki had been hating for a long period of time.

In May 2013, the wiki had been experiencing server issues, with the proposal being to remove images from Blocks and Items. As most of the editors haven't agreed, the alternative was to use LoadPage. At that time, it was used very rarely, but due to these issues, lot of navboxes were converted into these pages, which had sped the wiki. Meanwhile, a creation of separate namespaces has been requested, though it wasn't agreed on. However, a proposal for something, which was agreed on, was created few days later. This proposal was about wiki header's color and the conclusion was to change its text color to white. There was a discussion to change its background color, but it stayed on and did so until 2021.

In September 2013, "Minetip" tooltips were officially introduced.

Until late 2013, all versions of an edition were hosted on a single page. This started to become a problem during Java Edition 1.7's development in October 2013. The first page was for Java Edition 1.8, at that time called "1.8". To make sure users will be able to navigate from a one version to an another one with ease, a navbox was created It was also decided "Pocket Edition" and Legacy Console Edition versions would also use their own prefix, and while Pocket Edition started to use this system in 2015, it took 6 more years for Console Editions, way after version pages have taken over the wiki.

On May 7, 2014, Curse introduced Curse Profiles, an integrated social media system in Gamepedia offering a wide range of features. It was meant to be an alternative for user pages and user talk pages, which would display the same information across the entire network.

In Late 2014, Official Feed the Beast Wiki has had migrated to Gamepedia and therefore a logical question began circulating on wikis about the future of Mods on this wiki, though it took few years until something was decided on.

In October 2014, it has been suggested to create a namespace alias. Since then,  and   are aliases for "Minecraft Wiki" and "Minecraft Wiki talk" namespaces respectively.

On March 14, 2015, Talk page guidelines have been introduced.

In January 2016, a mobile app was finally launched for Minecraft Wiki. The mobile app has been one of the most requested things from both readers and editors since at least 2011. However, the excitement didn't last long, as the has been met with lot of criticism, concerning its inability to edit pages, read other namespaces or just reading other languages. While there were plans to add offline mode, add other languages and other features, it didn't take too long for the app to be abandoned. The last update was released in August 2016, and since then the app has been crashing for everybody, until it was withdrawn from the store sometime in 2017.

On July 18, 2016 at around 15:00 UTC, Minecraft Wiki surpassed 1 million edits, with the 1,000,000 millionth edit being done by Meeples10.

From acquisition to acquisition (August 2016 - November 2018)
On August 26, 2016, Curse has been acquired by Amazon through its subsidiary "Twitch Interactive". Slowly, Amazon's influence was becoming stronger, with Twitch streams as a new type of advertisement starting to appear at the bottom of the pages not long after. On November 24, 2017, Minecraft Wiki has been moved to Amazon Web Services

On May 1 and May 8, 2017, wiki agreed on icons for Curse Staff and ex-Mojang employees.

In 2017, Gamepedia announced an end to its Gamepedia PRO paid service, that was replaced by free Gamepedia PRO, that can be earned by editing wikis.

As the instant messaging services were becoming more and more common, there was a need for a wiki Discord. Around May 2018, there was an unofficial wiki Discord server, created by a non-admin, but admins weren't that keen on having it as an official one. That prompted admins to create their own and on June 15, 2018, Minecraft Wiki Discord server was officially launched.

In early June 2018, a wiki project for refactoring version labels was created. After a discussion, the second custom wiki role, patrollers, was created on July 12, 2018, which was followed by now defunct "Patroller requests" page, which was a place for verifying edits.

On December 12, 2018, it was announced that Fandom has bought the Gamepedia, including this wiki. In a short time, users were moved onto Fandom servers and Curse brand has been officially discontinued.

Bedrock Edition, Launcher, Consoles, spin-offs (June 2017 - September 2020)
Until March 9, 2019, the wiki primarily focused on Java Edition. After all, this was the original Minecraft, while rest were created long after. However, this started to change.

On June 13, 2017, a topic was opened on community portal, talking about the orientation of the wiki, which resulted in a wiki project called "Renaming". The goal of it was simple - "focus on other editions of Minecraft". This project was influential to the Minecraft community from the day 1 of the project. On June 17, 2017, the term Bedrock Edition saw its first usage, which was a term which later became de facto standard for the wiki and community as a whole and in the end was officially adopted by Mojang and became the official name of the edition, starting June 7, 2022. On June 23, 2017, at that time Mojang's current Community manager and wiki editor, HelenAngel, stepped in and tried to discuss her stance and how it has been referred at Mojang. While the argument for why Bedrock Edition shouldn't be named as "Bedrock Edition" haven't persuaded rest of the wiki editors, her comment about Console Edition rename did and so wiki came to the agreement, that since Console Edition does no longer include all editions, it should be suffixed by word "Legacy", so Console Edition became Legacy Console Edition.

After the Bedrock Edition 1.2.0 came though, the discussion staled. People tried to move on to the next logical step, which was to rename the pages. These proposals failed, which resulted discussion stopping in April 2018.

After the Bedrock Edition 1.2.0 came though, the discussion staled, as the proposal to begin the move failed. After the discussion was revived in January 2019, wiki agreed on prefixing versions. Pages started to focus more on all editions of the game. All Java Edition articles have received "Java Edition" prefix (for example, 1.12.2 became Java Edition 1.12.2) starting March 9, 2019, while pages without prefix have become disambiguations.

June 2019 was a very active month. There was a discussion about if the wiki should continue to use videos from "MCspotlights", a channel founded by Curse, that employed two YouTubers to make videos about Minecraft for Minecraft Wiki and embed them into pages. Since in 2015, the Curse decided to cancel mcspotlight project, as the time went by, the videos they produced were getting more and more outdated, to the point one wiki editor started to remove them. After being brought up on the community portal, the discussion resulted into a creation of wiki project called "Wiki videos". This project, while very ambiguous, it ended up as a flop few years afterwards.

As a result of an another discussion, which ran from June to September 2019, wiki officially disallows its pages to be created by anonymous users, starting September 11, 2019. Until then, creation of new pages was restricted by an abuse filter, allowing only redirects creation for anonymous users and newly registered users.

And finally, since June 2019, wiki has been discussing proposal to document Minecraft spin offs and other games (Minecraft Earth, Minecraft Dungeons, Minecraft: Story Mode). This discussion took several months, and the discussion turned into fighting about the scope of the wiki. Eventually, after the discussion was scheduled to close in early 2020, the final decision was creation of a separate namespace for Minecraft Dungeons, while Minecraft Earth in main namespace. Since the content has been documented as subpages of wiki projects, the moving was progressing quickly.

However, in few days it was decided the Minecraft Earth information may be conflicting with the page and the movement of the pages was put on halt. The result was a discussion, where it was decided that Minecraft Earth will also receive its own namespace.

As the wiki was becoming more complex and version histories were longer, it became clear there may be a need for simplified guides. This was already fulfilled in late 2018 to early 2019, with 1.13 and 1.14 guides. However, the guides really took off after they the links to the pages been added to Java Edition versions in late 2019, which spawned lot of interest into guides and together with Simple Guide table, all big major updates have had their guides created in coming months.

During 2020, as a result of COVID 19 pandemic, the wiki activity increased significantly, thus beginning a golden age of the wiki. This prompted much bigger projects, such as creation of launcher versions, together with Legacy Console Edition. Until September 2020, Legacy Console Edition version history page listed all version changelogs for all console editions prior to discontinuation of PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and PlayStation Vita editions, with the exception of PlayStation 4 editions released after the discontinuation of these 3 editions. Ultimately, it was decided that it would be moved to their own pages, with the similar versions sharing one changelog from a special template.

The wiki has been moved to Unified Community Platform (UCP), a new platform uniting Fandom and Gamepedia wikis, on October 5, 2020. In early 2021, as part of "UCX project" at Fandom, the wiki received a new mobile skin called "FandomMobile".

Minecraft Wiki Crossovers, domain migration and FandomDesktop skin (November 2020 - August 2021)
After Gamepedia has been bought by Fandom, some of the admins from Fandom Minecraft Wiki (today's location at "minecraft-archive.fandom.com") joined Gamepedia Minecraft Wiki Discord server to discuss cooperation with each other. Initially, users disagreed with each other's, as many users had thoughts that Fandom wiki is "useless", citing the weird way of documenting versions and allowance of mod documentation. However, this started to change in early 2019, as "Project Crossover" was announced by both Fandom and Gamepedia. In late December 2019, the Minecraft Wiki Discord server agreed on opening a discussion about protentional merge with Fandom wiki. It was already clear, that Fandom will merge to Gamepedia, since Gamepedia was official wiki after all, just the question was, if it will actually happen. There were some people, who thought the Fandom wiki will co-exist with the Gamepedia one (which, as was later proved, wasn't the case). As such, a "Minecraft Wikis Crossover" Discord server was created.

However, the discussion wasn't active at all, and was somewhat revived, when the migration of Gamepedia wikis to Fandom domain was announced. While this spawned discussion about "3 Minecraft Wikis" and crossovers with other wikis, there wasn't a real progress in talks. The discussion finally became active, when the migration to Fandom domain officially began. The process of resolving conflicting wikis would make Fandom wiki unsearchable in search results, so the process has been sped up. Following a poll on Legacy Fandom Minecraft Wiki, with more than 53% of people supporting the crossover and a support between administrators, Fandom's original Minecraft Wiki was archived on March 9, 2021, and banner was added directing people to this Minecraft Wiki.

During this time, Gamepedia wiki was solving an only blocker, which may prevent the fork from happening. The Fandom Wiki has been using Discussions system, which allowed a discussion about anything Minecraft or wiki related. Following a discussion, it was decided Minecraft Wiki won't enable discussions. In the end, this haven't stopped crossover from happening, and so on March 22, 2021, this wiki was migrated to "fandom.com" domain, while the archived wiki got moved to its current location, "minecraft-archive.fandom.com".

Following this successful Crossover, more crossovers happened. However, Minecraft Story Mode Wiki was the one which opposed, despite reapproaching several times. This prompted "Minecraft Story Mode Wiki" wiki project to take off. On August 26, 2021, this project ended up with "Minecraft Story Mode" namespace being set-up.

Since July 2021, the wiki has been using FandomDesktop as its primary skin.

Being Unofficial, lack of activity and dark age (October 2021 - December 2022)
In early October 2021, it was announced that Microsoft has terminated an official wiki partnership. The wiki was forced to make changes to main page and change its logo it had been using since 2013. Since then, Minecraft Wiki moved on towards becoming the most useful guide for everything Minecraft, even though the activity declined.

This resulted in 2022 being a very quiet year, with not much of discussion being done on-wiki. However, wiki had agreed on abandoning "Official pages" and the subpages were reclassified as wiki projects.

Change to comply with COPPA, present day (January 2023 - present)
Since January 24, 2023, anonymous users cannot edit the wiki, as Minecraft has been declared by Fandom as a wiki falling under COPPA law. The change decreased the amount of vandalism the wiki experienced, as most vandalism was done by anonymous accounts. However, the change decreased activity of the wiki, as anonymous editors made up a large portion of people that edited the wiki. This change was damaging, especially as it came into effect at a time when the wiki was already in an inactive period.

Wiki has also agreed on creating a namespace for Minecraft Legends, which was set-up on January 30, 2023.

After a brief discussion in the wiki's discord server, the wiki's English Twitter account became active again on March 10, 2023 after just under two years of inactivity. This was done as a response to the inactivity of the wiki, and a feeling of being disconnected with the larger Minecraft community expressed by some editors.

On March 25, 2023 Nixinova retired their beureaucrat and administrator rights. While this didn't affect the wiki negatively, it did bring to attention that the promotion of new bureaucrats would be beneficial, as the inactivity of both previous bureaucrats meant that no promotions to the patroller role had happened for over two years. Therefore, just few hours later on the same day, suggestions for new bureaucrats began.

Trivia

 * While the proposal of Community portal was to take a style from Wowpedia, the actual change was the style of "The Evony Wiki".