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Untitled

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How can you deem articles unimportant and then have things like this, where you observe Pikmin as being real people? This is ridiculous. 71.165.27.38 (talk) 02:37, 14 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

What IS this, exactly?68.192.12.161 (talk) 21:45, 24 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I'd love to know who the REAL singer is. 83.254.37.112 (talk) 03:39, 27 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

This article is useless as it has nothing to do with the performers. A small background for the performer can be found at http://www.japanesemusicarchive.com/strawberry_flower.htm --ElementOfChaos (talk) 12:33, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Sourcing

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Per the [Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Strawberry Flower|AfD] for this article, the charting needs to be sourced, STAT. A link to the Oricon chart for one single was provided, but more's needed. If someone who can read Japanese and navigate that site could add references, that would be Really Good. —Quasirandom (talk) 14:27, 30 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Help with information and sources

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Hello! I have re-written the Strawberry Flower article, it was filled with false information, including that it was a "virtual band", which it's not at all, along with fake information about a single named "Song of Hey! Pikmin", that doesn't even exist. With my limited Japanese knowledge, I went into Japanese sources and did the best I could. The article needs some help in verifying some information, namely:

  • Sales and chart peaks for "Pikmin Dance" The old article listed 100,000 copies and a #5 peak on the weekly charts.
  • Sales and chart peaks for "Tane no Uta". The old article listed 15,000 copies and a #28 peak on the weekly charts.
  • Would be cool if someone could also verify chart peaks for the Daily and Monthly charts for all songs. I found a source from one of the singers that Ai no Uta peaked at #1 on the Daily charts, but couldn't verify it in another source. If those chart peaks listed above are real, all singles must've appeared on at least the Daily charts too. User:damicroquete
While it is true that this isn't a virtual band, as they are a band that presents itself with human members (or so appears to me, as probably the albums themselves have more deep info about that), not all of that "false information" was actually false. The Song of Hey! Pikmin does exist, it was used for Japanese commercials for the 2017 3DS game Hey! Pikmin. One of these commercials can be seen here and here, while the complete version of that song can be found here (this is the actual link of the video, but it doesn't load to me for some reason, so I used an archive). I found this info thanks to this page, in any case.
I agree that there should be sources and charts for the sale of those songs, though I haven't found any of them, but I will search more deeply to see if there are some. Still, I think that some of the info that was taken from this article should be re-added, or at least acknowledge the existence of the Song of Hey! Pikmin. -Kirbeat (talk) 17:59, 10 December 2021 (UTC)[reply]