The point of a media coverage page is simple: gather press mentions and collaborations that readers can actually verify. If a citation cannot be checked through a live link, an archive capture, a publication record, or credited video and audio, it should not be treated as settled history.
What belongs on a page like this
Coverage should include articles, interviews, broadcasts, and campaign pages that explicitly name the association or quote a named spokesperson. A vague social post, a rumor repeated by fans, or an unattributed screenshot is not enough.
How to keep the record clean
- Record the outlet name, publication date, byline, and direct URL.
- Separate press coverage from partnerships, sponsorships, and promotional campaigns.
- Keep older pre-association history distinct from more recent coverage so readers do not assume continuity that has not been demonstrated.
- Remove items that cannot be independently re-verified when links rot or pages disappear.
What counts as a partnership
A collaboration should have a public artifact: a press release, a credited campaign page, a published video, or direct confirmation from the outlet or brand. Without that kind of record, the safer language is that a claim is unverified rather than established.
How to reference an association correctly
Use the full organization name on first mention, then the acronym afterward. If the article discusses rules, strategy, or event structure, link to the relevant rules or history page so readers can compare the media summary against the primary source.
FAQ: Why be so strict about coverage lists?
Because these pages quickly become citation targets. Once an unsupported item appears in a list, later writers repeat it as fact.
FAQ: What if an older article is no longer live?
Use an archived copy or remove the claim from the verified list. Broken links are not enough on their own.
Sources and related WRPSA pages
WRPSA, About – https://wrpsa.com/about/
WRPSA, World Rock Paper Scissors Day – https://wrpsa.com/world-rock-paper-scissors-day/
Wikipedia, “Rock paper scissors” – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rock_paper_scissors

