Thread:MondlichtPanda/@comment-4786757-20200629211008/@comment-37915141-20200728124503

@Andisimon


 * QB: Thanks, I'll run Rory's findings by the tests I've done.
 * BB: I'll check the BB theory page when I have time one of these days.
 * TUH: As Jadelady said, MC is around 19 and she just thinks Gemma is around 30.
 * The beginning says "London. May 5, 1913."
 * After the Amelia scene it says "New York City. One month later..."
 * If you buy the outfit in Ch2 you'll get a flashback where it says "You look over the locket again, a memory of the tree stirring deep inside you, from when you were six and Amelia was twelve" and it's in "New York, 1900."
 * When Gemma arrives it says "as a vivacious woman of around thirty bustles into the drawing room"
 * Aside from that we only know that her husband was Duka Thomas and it "has been almost five years since his illness and death". Which doesn't help much with her age.

ThatRomeo wrote: Andisimon wrote: Any ideas how to name their pages? I would suggest to go with their default names since their last names are mentioned so that people can find their pages more easily, but if anyone has another suggestion, I don't mind. We can just mention in their page that their first names are customizable.

I'm with ThatRomeo on this one. Aside from personally hating to refer to characters with 3 words instead of a simple name the fandom widely uses, and it also looking weird as hell to me, these three are the most common tropes and PB recently lets us customize the name of LIs. What will you do when another "Childhood Crush" or "BFF" LI comes? The writers also very often refer to them by their default names, just like with the MCs.

If the nowiki with the apostrophes is such a concern I'm sure SonsuzEvren's bot can handle it. If not, it still takes about 2 minutes with an editor to find and replace hundreds of instances in an article, e.g. from Ava's (so it's easy in both the code and the visual wiki editor for whoever doesn't want to mess with nowiki) to Ava ' s (I sometimes edit hundreds of thousands of lines all at once).