Children, janitors,
We come, not to bury Pokemaster, but to praise him.
Purpose and scope
This review assesses Pokemaster’s art of industrious minimalism throughout his tenure as Super Administrator of Pokémon Database from the site’s early days in 2010 through to July 2025. The objective is to provide an evidence-based account of his promises and outcomes, measure his performance against clearly defined indicators, and set out recommendations informed by community feedback matured under light touch and long intervals.
Methodology
The analysis involved reading Meta-PokéBase threads from 2010 - 2025 directed at Pokemaster. Each instance was logged chronologically along with his response (if any) and the eventual outcome. For objectivity, five key performance indicators (KPIs) were established: -
- Responsiveness, i.e., whether he responded at all and how quickly
after the issue was raised. Same-day replies scored highest; posts
with no reply scored lowest;
- Delivery, i.e., whether he completed the promised action (bug fix, feature, promotion, policy change) and how long it took.
Unimplemented promises scored poorly;
- Communication & Transparency, i.e., whether his replies explained the problem clearly and kept users informed;
- Reliability & Consistency, i.e., whether similar issues recurred, indicating oversight or insufficient testing, and whether recurring
events (such as promotions or name‑change days) were run regularly;
- Leadership & Delegation, i.e., whether he ensured the moderation team was resourced and empowered. Long delays in promotions and
failure to delegate administrative powers were scored low.
Every thread where Pokemaster was asked to act was assessed on these indicators using a five-point scale, where 5 represents exemplary performance and 1 represents poor or no performance. Scores were averaged to produce overall figures. What follows below is a representative summary catalogue of his actions, and, owing to the nature of the beast, his apparent failures.
Factual matrix
2010 - 2011
In 2010, Pokemaster demonstrated prompt engagement with the community. He acknowledged and fixed a broken Black/White evolution chain within hours, added a moveset-change section for HeartGold/SoulSilver after promising it, and provided clear explanations when users queried missing EV yield data and stat explanations. He also repaired a broken link in the site rules. These tasks were completed quickly and communicated clearly. This yields high marks for responsiveness and delivery.
However, even at this stage there were seeds of future problems. He expressed interest in launching a polls/awards system, but it never materialised. This early unfulfilled promises foreshadows later trends of incomplete projects.
2012
In 2012, Pokemaster handled several bug reports promptly. He restored the Black & White 2 link when notified it was missing, and explained that an IP-blocking feature was working as intended, and clarified that clock glitches were due to daylight‑saving changes. When asked for an update on new‑user features, he provided a detailed list of changes he had implemented, such as username changes with restrictions and role badges.
The year also saw the first major backlog of feature requests. A lengthy post gathered suggestions ranging from polls and a notification bar to flag counters and comment counters. Pokemaster said he would work through the list over the week. While some ideas, such as an itemdex and map pages, were eventually delivered, many (notably the polls/awards, flag counters and notification system) remain unimplemented. This suggests a pattern of over-promising and under-delivering.
2013 - 2016
During this period Pokemaster, continued to fix technical issues, such as a temporary MySQL error in 2014. However, a June 2014 list of minor interface bugs (missing view counts, pagination glitches, hidden admin views) was never addressed. These “small” problems accumulated and amount to neglect.
Staffing concerns also emerged. In December 2013, a post titled “Please consider promoting another Editor” argued that posts were waiting over ten hours to be approved because most moderators were inactive. The author praised the user fondant as “the most active user on the site”, and noted that approval queues were backed up. They complained that previous promotion requests received no response. Pokemaster never replied. Around the same time, another meta thread suggested changing moderation thresholds to make the admin system less off‑putting for new users. Months later a commenter bumped the thread, and noted that he “was inactive when this was posted”, and that he might only see threads that show up on the Meta front page. These posts suggest early signs of disengagement with governance and a failure to support his moderators.
2017 - 2021
As the site matured, the community grew frustrated with the lack of delegation. The absence of new promotions persisted. A 2017 promotions thread had to be bumped repeatedly by the moderator, Fizz, to draw Pokemaster’s attention. By 2021, the situation reached a tipping point with the meta post “Suggestion: Promote Fizz to Admin”. The proposer cited Fizz’s consistent leadership. It was plain to all that Fizz “takes charge when needed” and consults staff before taking action. The author lamented that whenever drama or trolls appeared, moderators had to wait for Pokemaster to implement IP bans and promotions, which left the site exposed. They argued that Fizz had managed promotions since 2017 and cares about the community, while Pokemaster’s inactivity had delayed promotions for two months.
The thread also recorded Fizz’s own view. He was willing to take on the role but noted that giving full admin powers would effectively hand the community over to him and might carry risks. Nevertheless, the author suggested creating a custom role with limited powers so that Fizz could act on spam and promotions without waiting for the Super Administrator. Commenters questioned whether Pokemaster would step down and whether the site could sustain two administrators. The post received no official response. This once again suggests the conclusion that requests for delegation were wilfully or recklessly ignored.
2022 - 2023
In 2022 and 2023, Pokemaster’s presence on Meta diminished noticeably. A long “site update” thread in 2022 summarised his prior year’s changes but astutely observed that many suggestions remained unimplemented. Pokemaster replied with a brief update on new features, but did not commit to a clear roadmap. More starkly, a 2023 post titled “Bot/spam account problem” documented a surge in spam sign‑ups and recommended adding CAPTCHAs. The author updated the post in 2025 to note that the issue had worsened. The thread never received a reply. This would suggest a complete failure of communication and on the spam/abuse front.
Promotions continued to stagnate. A 2023 promotions nomination thread was ignored, and comments in other threads suggested that promotions were delayed by months. The combination of spam proliferation and unaddressed promotions led to frustration and demotivation among moderators.
2024 - 2025
Although largely absent from governance, Pokemaster still appeared intermittently to fix technical issues. In July 2024 he corrected a Rate-My-Team glitch and apologised for forgetting to remove old code. Later that month he updated the site with new 3D sprites after users pointed out that Generation 9 models were missing. He also acknowledged that grouping Pokémon HOME and Pokémon GO sprites under Generation 8 was confusing and said he “should move them to their own section”. This change has not been made.
He responded to a suggestion for a move-target drop‑down, pointing users to an existing multi‑target page, and again fixed a Rate-My-Team error in September 2024 after forgetting to remove advertisement code. These incidents suggest that while his technical competence remains high, there is a lack of systematic testing to prevent regression.
In mid-2025, he announced a rare username‑change window, yet he did not address comments complaining that the promotions backlog had still not been cleared. Shortly afterwards, he fixed an email confirmation issue caused by his email provider downgrading his account and gave a transparent explanation. A June 2025 thread asking why there were no name‑change days went unanswered. This, further, undermines confidence and would, perhaps. There is a view which suggests that, perhaps, the time has come to downgrade his Pokémon Database account as well.