Talk:SoulCalibur II

Name
Technically, the title is Soulcalibur II. This should be altered. Saibh 11:32, 28 March 2008 (EDT)


 * Actually, Namco's sites for the games consistantly type it out as "SOULCALIBUR"... So perhaps the article should be moved to "SOULCALIBUR II"? --Ando (T : C) 14:50, 28 March 2008 (EDT)


 * Okay, I've got the game loaded up on my GameCube right now. All of the good soul weapons, there are three (Nightmare's, Xiangua's, and Talim's), are called "Soul Calibur". The title on the title screen is "Soul Calibur II". No matter how Namco likes to mess up the title on its site, the game's title is "Soul Calibur II". That's it. A move is in order. 02:21, July 4, 2008 (UTC)

I'm not so sure here. Why would Namco consistently spell it out in all caps, as one word? Look at this press release for the third game. But to be fair, this is all for the third game... I'm having a much more difficult time finding convincing evidence towards the second game's spelling. What to do, what to do? 05:45, 4 July 2008 (UTC)


 * Well, the game is named after the sword. The sword is called "Soul Calibur". Therefore, the logical name is "Soul Calibur II". I'm not entirely sure on this, but I think that Namco likes to refer to its games in caps because of its history with arcade games. Many arcade games are limited to capital letters only. So Namco's spelling its games in caps is just a habit, not the actual name. Remember that the Nintendo system in question is called the GameCube, but the word on the system itself is "GAMECUBE". It is just a habit that companies have because they think it would look better in that situation. In this case, "SOULCALIBUR II" is an incorrect title and is not appropriate for a wiki. "Soul Calibur II" is the proper title. 06:14, July 4, 2008 (UTC)


 * according to the game, the name is SOULCALIBUR II.

I own the game. I'm reading the case, even as I type this. Throughout the booklet, the title is written like this, eg.

"Place the SOULCALIBUR II disc on the disc tray with the label facing up and close the disk tray."

An excerpt from the instruction booklet, that. --Yuvorias, 17:55, 4 July 2008 (EST)


 * Regarding the GameCube, that's mildly different in that the console itself has the logo -- logos can have entirely different capitalization than what the company actually wants. But then again, you say that if the game itself says "Soul Calibur II", that should be the title, not what Namco says. If so, then if the GameCube itself says "GAMECUBE", should not that be the title as opposed to what Nintendo says? Obviously not, as it's referred to as such in one or two instances (in this case, the logo and the logo alone). Throughout the manual and all of Nintendo's press releases and promotional material, they spell it as "GameCube", which is exactly the same scenario as Namco and "Soul Calibur / SOULCALIBUR". 14:25, 4 July 2008 (UTC)


 * I suggest: moving this page to Soul Calibur II, then stating in the article that the game is also referred to as "SOULCALIBUR II". Fair enough? 14:34, July 4, 2008 (UTC)


 * I'll still hold that "SOULCALIBUR II" is the proper title, but I think that I can live with this. 14:36, 4 July 2008 (UTC)

Wait a second. Wikipedia has the article titles for each of the games as a combination of the two: "Soulcalibur". Perhaps we should go with this? I believe that there are two different ways of typing the phrase, personally: The weapon is "Soul Calibur", but the game is "Soulcalibur".

Soulcalibur is now officially one word, no longer two, and plus why  the  hell  is it in  all  caps!?!?


 * The above discussion explains all of that. 00:38, 12 July 2008 (UTC)

I read it, and sites  and things that  promote or  publish something write their products in  all caps to     make it    seem  more Attention   catching,   such as    I have  an old  walkthrough guide  for   the  classic  Doom  II  and  everytime   when  "Doom II" was written it    always was  written  such  as "DOOM  II"  this article  should  have lowercase  letters in the sense of how it  does in the Wikipedia  article  for this game.


 * That makes sense. Well, I think a delete and a move is in order. From this and the way the title is pronounced in the game, the title is "Soul Calibur II". 05:32, July 14, 2008 (UTC)

It should  be  done  imidiately,   the title of this article  ridicules the actual game name.

Naming poll

 * Okay, okay, hang on. I'd like a vote on this, to make it easier to see where we all stand. Poll closes in a week (7/24/08) . The poll now ends on August 24, 2008 to allow for extra votes and vote reconsiderations after new evidence for one side has been presented. A new section was added as well, for those who wish to vote for it. 22:45, 17 July 2008 (UTC)

Yes, this is a crazy and stupid argument. Please vote anyway. :P

SUPPORT FOR "SOULCALIBUR II"
 * 1) This is my pick! It's how Namco types it in ALL promotional material, and I'd trust the creators of the game before the publishers. 04:41, 24 July 2008 (UTC)

SUPPORT FOR "Soulcalibur II"
 * 1) The game has it as one word. Therefore, it is to be 1 word. 23:08, 17 July 2008 (UTC)
 * 2) The first Soulcalibur game was two words, and I have owned Soulcalibur II for over 5 years now, I beat it when I was 10, and I'm bored to death with it and don't even play it anymore (that's how much I've played it), just because the title is "Soulcalibur" doesn't mean the sword name is one word too. Also proof on Wikipedia. I pay my regards to one word, the only thing that really borthers me is that it's in all caps.
 * 3) Just in time... I vote all caps, but this is a good enough compromise. I own the game. Its in the manual. Its SOULCALIBUR II. But Soulcalibur II is fine as well.--Magnus orion 03:42, 24 July 2008 (UTC)

SUPPORT FOR "Soul Calibur II"
 * 1) First of all, in the opening screen of the game, it is pronounced as two words. There is a significant pause between them. So long of a pause that it cannot possibly be one word. The game is named after the weapon. The weapon's name is "Soul Calibur". That is two words. As far as the title on the title screen looking like one word, the disks for many Harry Potter games have what looks like "HarryPotter". A few Star Wars games look like "STARWARS". But take notice that the "C" in the title for the game in question is really big. That classically means another word is started and the normal space is left out because the big letter would serve the same function. So the title is "Soul Calibur II". 23:24, July 17, 2008 (UTC) &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;ADDITION: &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;Wikipedia is not a valid/reliable source. Nintendo is however. Nintendo says it is "Soul Calibur II". Nintendo issued the licensed for the game. And Nintendo says it is "Soul Calibur II". That is the end of it. 02:01, July 24, 2008 (UTC)  Other sources include: Game Rankings, GameFAQs, Amazon, Google,   GameStats, PlayStation.com, & Xbox.com)

COMMENTS
 * Why then, Matt, does the manual AND all of Namco's official stuff say "SOULCALIBUR" instead of "Soul Calibur"? Do you have an explanation for this? 03:06, 24 July 2008 (UTC)
 * It is because that is how Namco draws attention to the fact that it is a title of something rather than a normal word. Note how Namco spells its name like "NAMCO". Remember that Namco is a Japanese company and there is no "Namco of America" company like Nintendo has. 03:13, July 24, 2008 (UTC)
 * It seems that there is a NAMCO BANDAI Games America Inc. Although I doubt it is comparable to Nintendo of America Inc. Also, capital letters are used for emphasis. 03:25, July 24, 2008 (UTC)
 * I'm confused as to what Namco being a Japanese company has to do with ANYTHING, but okay, whatever. Why would they need emphasis with this, though? I've never seen any other game do this... Not even any other Namco games. I just flipped through the Tales of Symphonia manual (made by Namco) and it was all typed out as "Tales of Symphonia". No all caps. (Also, I'm not sure how half of those sources you cited [especially Google] are any more reliable than Wikipedia.) As a final note, this IS still a poll, and quite frankly, you're outnumbered... The only thing I could do at this point is extend the duration of the poll to give people time to view your new evidence and potentially change their choice. Otherwise, majority rules, as has been the case with, well, pretty much every decision we've had to make. :P 03:36, 24 July 2008 (UTC)
 * Extend the poll by one month. That will give plenty of time for others to vote. 03:46, July 24, 2008 (UTC)
 * Good grief, a whole month? I suppose I could do that. It's not like this is such an important page that a decision needs to be reached right now, so... Alright. A month it is. 03:51, 24 July 2008 (UTC)
 * Check this out. Perhaps it will give you some perspective on this issue. Maybe then you'll realize that the game company's word is not law. 04:14, July 24, 2008 (UTC)
 * "...and I think that's ridiculous enough to over-rule. Ditto for companies who insist you use all caps for their product name."


 * One man's opinion is hardly factual evidence. This whole new part of your argument seems extremely flawed to me. It sounds to me like you're saying that the correct title is SOULCALIBUR II, but that we shouldn't do that for the sole reason of "that's how Namco types it". In actuality, we should. This Wiki is for factual information, not for "well, I think that the way that this company types it is weird and stupid and so we shouldn't do that". We just need to determine what the factual information IS. Also, in case anyone cares, I've sent off a letter to Namco themselves asking them what the correct title is. I'll post the letter here once I've received an answer (sure enough they're gonna say "Soul Calibur", knowing my luck :P). 04:41, 24 July 2008 (UTC)
 * Your points are valid, but all the same, so are his. I just thought that the article was interesting. I still don't think Namco is giving the right name on its site. Besides, having a name in all caps is not acceptable grammar. So yes, SOULCALIBUR II is wrong, whether Namco likes it or not. I can't prove it, but I know I'm right. 04:59, July 24, 2008 (UTC)
 * Yeah, it was definitely an interesting article, I'll give you that. Regarding "having a name in all caps is not acceptable grammar", well... technically, neither is "GameCube" or "GameFAQs" or "PlayStation" or, well, a lot of stuff. And yet you seem to think that these are acceptable...? 05:23, 24 July 2008 (UTC)