"A difficulty's name must be unrelated to a username. Guest difficulties, however, may indicate possession with its creators' username or nickname. (e.g. Guest Creator's Insane). Words that happen to be usernames are acceptable within difficulty names as long as they relate to the song."
This is a proposal to move this general rule to a guideline due to several QATs determining that it can be broken under circumstances. One of these circumstances is that the map is part of a series of maps. The evidence supporting this change is the dozens of already existing maps that adhere to a series, such as "Outer Oni," "Taikovic," "Dysthymia," and "Raidcore." All of these are often unrelated to the map, but have several ranked difficulties of each.
More support for this change is in a recent issue thread, where two QATs determined that breaking this rule is fine (as well as in every instance of the examples mentioned before). I think that it's important that things that are rules should follow the sentiment of "they are not guidelines and may not be broken under any circumstance" to avoid confusion determining which rules can be broken and which rules can't (this concept should not exist under the current definition of a rule).
Switching this very often broken rule to a guideline will eliminate the possibility if people interpreting other rules as breakable when, in fact, they are not.
This is a proposal to move this general rule to a guideline due to several QATs determining that it can be broken under circumstances. One of these circumstances is that the map is part of a series of maps. The evidence supporting this change is the dozens of already existing maps that adhere to a series, such as "Outer Oni," "Taikovic," "Dysthymia," and "Raidcore." All of these are often unrelated to the map, but have several ranked difficulties of each.
More support for this change is in a recent issue thread, where two QATs determined that breaking this rule is fine (as well as in every instance of the examples mentioned before). I think that it's important that things that are rules should follow the sentiment of "they are not guidelines and may not be broken under any circumstance" to avoid confusion determining which rules can be broken and which rules can't (this concept should not exist under the current definition of a rule).
Switching this very often broken rule to a guideline will eliminate the possibility if people interpreting other rules as breakable when, in fact, they are not.