Review: Nswpedia
The website is divided into several sections, including:
Beyond downloads, the site provides technical tutorials, such as how to use file-hosting services like 1fichier to manage large game files. Safety and Trust Analysis
The site hosts a massive collection of titles, including popular exclusives like Pokémon Legends: Arceus and Super Mario Maker 2 .
My article was ready. I had a profile of the site, a source, and screenshots. I pitched it to my editor at a major publication. He called me the next morning. nswpedia review
The URL was simple: nswpediareview.net .
Over the next three weeks, NSWPedia Review became my obsession. It appeared to be a wiki-style database of local history, but every entry concerned an event that had been scrubbed from the public record.
Two days later, I received an email in my encrypted inbox. The website is divided into several sections, including:
"Because memory is a liability in New South Wales," the Editor said. "Do you know how many people go missing in the National Parks here? The official number is in the dozens. The number in my database is in the hundreds. I catalogued a landslide in the Blue Mountains in 2002 that buried a tourist bus. The government classified it to prevent panic about the stability of the cliffs. They paid off the families. They scrubbed the news feeds. But the mountain remembers. I just record what the mountain says."
The site was gone.
NSWpedia is recommended for anyone interested in learning about New South Wales, including students, researchers, and history buffs. I had a profile of the site, a source, and screenshots
I argued, but he was right. A story without proof is just fiction.
It was as if someone had archived a version of history that had been edited out.
"They did happen," the Editor replied. "You know the concept of the Mandela Effect? Where a group of people remember something that never occurred? NSWPedia Review is the opposite. We catalogue events that occurred, but which no one remembers."
At first glance, it looked like a doppelgänger of a bureaucratic site. Grey background, sans-serif font, the coat of arms of New South Wales in the top left corner. But there was something off about the coat of arms—the kangaroo and emu were facing the wrong way. And the headline wasn't about zoning laws.
The site had no usernames. There was simply "Editor." I wanted to know who was running this. I reached out to Dr. Aris Thorne, a lecturer in Digital Forensics at UTS.