BRRR go brrrrrrrrr

The BOLD, revert, revert, revert cycle (BRRR) is a proactive method for forcing the version of an article that you prefer. It is a cross between the Gaming the system process and "Ignore all rules", and it is particularly useful for upsetting your opponents that object to your edits, initiating escalation, keeping discussion from ever moving forward, and ensuring that dispute resolution is never used, saving you time and aggravation. Note that this process should not be used with care and diplomacy; some editors will be really upset with this approach, and that is the idea.

What BRRR is, and is not[edit]

BRRR is most useful when you want to escalate an edit war and get all editors involved worked up. It is an excellent strategy to keep your opponents on their toes, as most people will react with indignation, which you can later call upon as a personal attack on your "good faith" edits.

BRRR is best used by experienced edit-warriors. It requires no more diplomacy or skill to use successfully than other methods. Use popups or similar tools to revert your opponent, and always use "rv Vandalism" or "rv POV", or something to that effect in the edit summary.

Sometimes BRRR is used to indirectly bully newcomers of Wikipedia (particularly for their perceived lack of experience), but bear in mind that one day these Wikipedians might just evolve into legends.

You can try using it in less volatile situations, but take care when doing so. BRRR is a justification for imposing one's own view, and tendentious editing without consensus. It is a way for editors who have realized that if they start edit-warring, it will attract other editors with the same POV, and help in forcing the desired outcome: get the article reverted to the preferred version, regardless of merit, and to get the other side to be blocked for "disruption".

But most importantly, BRRR is not BRD!

The BRRR process[edit]

  1. Boldly make the desired change to the page.
  2. Wait until someone reverts your change or makes another substantial edit.
  3. Revert that change immediately with an edit summary designed to get your opponent as upset as possible (e.g. "rv vandalism" or "rv to consensus version")
  4. Be sure not to get caught in WP:3RR violations; be sure that you have learned how to game the system before ever attempting BRRR!

Wash, rinse, repeat. If no one reverts after a couple of days, congratulations! You won!

Details[edit]

For each step in the cycle, here are some points to remember.

Bold

Revert (anything that you don't agree with)

Discuss Totally unnecessary

Edit warring (who cares, as long as you don't violate 3RR?)

Variations[edit]

BRRRC has been proposed as a more faithful description of Wikipedians behavior, especially if a basic BRRR is unsuccessful due to unaccountable interference from multiple other editors. BRRRC is BOLD, revert, revert, revert, complain to an admin. If you haven't got a handful of friends among the active admin corps who are willing to do you a few small favors, no questions asked, then WP:ANI is the most appropriate venue for the complaint. However, the complaints can also be presented at WP:AN, WP:AIV, WP:AN/3RR, and other suitable noticeboards.

If other editors attempt to discuss the issue, the simple tactic of refusing to be drawn in will work for a while and is often all you need. If the discussion doesn't die down or an opposing editor persists in restoring, join in briefly: add a disparaging one-liner, then a long rant about how expert you are on the topic and the opposing editor has committed every Wikipedia sin you can find to link to. Do not return to the discussion unless it is to mis-read some valid criticism of you, in which case repeat as before.

See also[edit]