Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Game.Wiki is a site related to aggregating and hosting game wikis. Based on the captured page text, it showcases multiple game wikis, such as Forza Horizon 6, Subnautica 2, Wartales, Into the Breach, Dawn of War, and others, with each entry showing the number of pages. Its positioning appears to be more for gamers and community knowledge maintainers than for traditional internal enterprise knowledge bases.
Confirmed core capabilities include centrally listing different game wikis, displaying the page count for each wiki, and offering a “Request a Wiki” entry point that lets users apply to create a new wiki. The page also shows keyboard operation hints, such as select, navigate, close, and return to parent, suggesting that the navigation experience may be optimized for quick browsing. However, the captured text does not show common wiki platform capabilities such as an editor, version history, comments, moderation, role-based permissions, template systems, and so on, so its depth of collaboration cannot be further confirmed.
The page content does not disclose any plans or pricing information, nor does it explain whether the service is free, offers a trial, uses an advertising model, sponsorship model, or enterprise paid plans. The deployment model is also unknown, so it is not possible to determine whether it is purely cloud-hosted or supports self-hosting/private deployment. No payment methods are mentioned either.
From a SaaS/enterprise software perspective, Game.Wiki currently provides limited public information. There is no visible mention of third-party integrations, APIs, webhooks, SSO, audit logs, backups, tiered permissions, data security compliance, or related features. Therefore, if it is to be used for enterprise knowledge management or documentation for commercial projects, its admin backend, data export options, and security commitments should be verified further.
Its strengths are its focus on the gaming vertical and its clear entry points. It is suitable for players looking up reference material, communities starting game encyclopedia projects, and game communities that do not yet have an independent wiki and want to request a new site. The downside is that there is insufficient information on monetization, permissions, security, and scalability, making it unsuitable for direct evaluation and procurement as a known, controllable enterprise-grade knowledge base solution.
Access from mainland China is unknown and should be tested in practice. If access, editing, or account systems are limited, alternatives include Fandom, Wiki.gg, Miraheze, self-hosted MediaWiki, or general-purpose knowledge bases such as Notion and Confluence.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on game.wiki official site.
game.wiki is an Unknown Gaming provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach game.wiki directly.