Editing List of leaks
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A '''leak''' is a premature revelation of information, especially without prior permission to release such information. While many measures are taken to prevent leaks, such as enforcing non-disclosure agreements among parties involved in developing the game, games frequently have important information leaked before its formal reveal. | A '''leak''' is a premature revelation of information, especially without prior permission to release such information. While many measures are taken to prevent leaks, such as enforcing non-disclosure agreements among parties involved in developing the game, games frequently have important information leaked before its formal reveal. | ||
Leaks can either be done intentionally via third-parties for a variety of reasons, such as increasing publicity for a game or for malicious intentions, or unintentionally via oversights in officially released media | Leaks can either be done intentionally via third-parties for a variety of reasons, such as increasing publicity for a game or for malicious intentions, or unintentionally via oversights in officially released media. | ||
Due to the lack of a developed infrastructure on the Internet prior to their releases, neither ''[[Super Smash Bros.]]'' nor ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]'' had any verifiable leaks. Starting with ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]'', the significantly more developed Internet made them much more common, particularly in pre-release hype. However, a large amount of leaks tend to be invariably sketchy, often with radically different contents from what is actually in the game. The subsequent large amount of rumors makes it very difficult to pinpoint legitimate leaks before their contents are officially confirmed; this is especially a concern with purely textual leaks, as the modes of discourse with these kinds of posts tend to differ very little. In spite of this, a varying number of real leaks can emerge, though they have been historically met with backlash upon their initial posting, often either for being deemed too outlandish to be true or for "parroting" claims made by other posts. | Due to the lack of a developed infrastructure on the Internet prior to their releases, neither ''[[Super Smash Bros.]]'' nor ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]'' had any verifiable leaks. Starting with ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]'', the significantly more developed Internet made them much more common, particularly in pre-release hype. However, a large amount of leaks tend to be invariably sketchy, often with radically different contents from what is actually in the game. The subsequent large amount of rumors makes it very difficult to pinpoint legitimate leaks before their contents are officially confirmed; this is especially a concern with purely textual leaks, as the modes of discourse with these kinds of posts tend to differ very little. In spite of this, a varying number of real leaks can emerge, though they have been historically met with backlash upon their initial posting, often either for being deemed too outlandish to be true or for "parroting" claims made by other posts. |