This page is intended as humor. It is not, has never been, nor will ever be, a Wikipedia policy or guideline. Rather, it illustrates standards or conduct that are generally not accepted by the Wikipedia community. |
This page in a nutshell: If your bold edit gets reverted for some reason, revert again. Keep reverting until everyone else is too angry or exhausted to stop you. Some misguided editors (probably vandals) may try to confuse you using meaningless acronyms like "WP:3RR" and "WP:BRD". Ignore them, and continue reverting until you win. Remember that all rules are optional, and this means you shouldn't bother with paltry things like consensus, discussion, and dispute resolution. |
The Bold, Revert, Revert, Revert cycle (BRRR) is a proactive strategy for winning edit wars. It is a cross between gaming the system process, the "ignore all rules" excuse, and mutual assured destruction. It is particularly useful for upsetting your opponents who object to your edits in order to maximize their tears for harvest, ideally to the point that you can fill a cup made from the skull of an editor who dared to disagree with you.
Ensure that dispute resolution is never used, or else the terrorists will have won. Instead, re-education on Wikipedia's rules, initiating massive escalation to rapidly defeat your adversary's will to ever edit Wikipedia again, and cutting the power to their house, all work to blockade hostile propaganda and disinformation from corrupting the pristine, entirely-neutral (when it aligns with your view) bastion of fully-verifiable information that is the great yet fragile Wikipedia, of which you are the sole defender. Never negotiate with the enemies of verifiability. Only initiate dispute resolution when it is to your tactical advantage - this will save you wasted time and aggravation, while easily and quickly forcing them upon those whose edits with whom you disagree.
Note that this process should be used with extreme aggression and without diplomacy, so as to surprise your opponent and force unconditional surrender. Some editors will be extremely upset with this approach, and that is the idea. Give no mercy, and feel no remorse.