Tropepia

Tropepia is a wiki website based in El Kadsre that collects and documents descriptions and examples of various plot conventions and plot devices, more commonly known as tropes, that are found within many creative works. Launched in 1987, the site was the precursor to TV Tropes. As of 2020, Tropepia has over 425,000 pages.

Pre-Alpha Testings
Tropepia began development in 1984 during the early rise in popularity of LenseNet. It's original holding company, Electronic Media Archival Services Ltd., was founded in 1980 by sibling programmer duo Robert and Leslie Greenspun, who wished to create a electronic archive of "tropes" viewable as computer software for and  computers.

Launch
Tropepia was launched in 1987 on Theorynet Browser. The first page was for the original Transformers cartoon. Over 300 pages were added in the course of a month. Electronic Media Archival Services Ltd. later changed it's name to Tropepia Ltd. in 1990.

Rise of Tropepia
Tropepia's success led to it being dubbed "a electronic mecca for nerd culture" by The Boston Globe. In 1992, the website won the for "their users' collected writings about various media topics".

The Greenspuns later retired in 1994 and sold Tropepia to Italo Bernárdez and Richard Kjerulf, who improved the site's layout while also writing new rules, such as the "Manual of Style". Many of Tropepia's changes made under Italo and Richard were controversial to some tropers.

Downfall of Tropepia
In 1999, Tropepia Ltd. was acquired by a -incorporated, -based computer software company called DuMont Software, which was founded in 1993 and was run by Craig S. Saavedra. Saavedra had previously been an editor for Tropepia but quit due to issues with other users. The two companies then merged to form DuMont Telematics. Saavedra chose to fire and ban much of the previous moderator team over reports of them being unfair, hiring former admins of the Tropepia website Tropes Unlimited as replacement moderators. Craig also deleted the majority of the Manual of Style, having heard past complaints that it was unfair and eliminated a conversational tone the site once had, and replaced it with the "Editor's Guide", which was deemed to be "more fair". Later on in 2001, DuMont Telematics moved headquarters to, allegedly to benefit from tax breaks.

The website's era under DuMont Telematics is considered to be a "Dark Age", with many users having left (including Fast Eddie, who left to create his own trope website, TV Tropes).

Modern Era
In mid-2010, DuMont Telematics filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Delaware, after Saavedra had a dispute with, who was a huge investor in DuMont Telematics, and a series of financial issues and layoffs within the company. During the company's liquidation, Tropepia was sold to Robert and Leslie Greenspun's Canadian nephew Clarissa Jo McDonagh, who soon renamed her -based company, CJM Software, to Tropepia Holdings LLC.

Currently, controversy has been raised over the website's userbase. One Tropepia editor claimed that the main people using it are editors who were banned from TV Tropes and All The Tropes Wiki for various offenses, former longtime TV Tropes users who disagreed with the Manual of Style's "Dos" and "Don'ts", and highly respected users that have joined before 2008, when TV Tropes became available in El Kadsre.

The biggest controversy was when someone renamed "C/BarackObama" to "C/[n-word]Monkey" back in October 2019, the mods hardly did anything to stop him besides a 3 day ban.