Knowledge_Seeker said in forum #437562:
Last I checked, Senki Zesshou Symphogear is a magical girl show.
Of course we can discuss how broad or narrow the definition of magical girl should be (like the chart above). But at least in japanese context, "魔法少女" (Magical Girl) is used as a much narrower term. So I‘m afriad it's unlikely for you to find anyone categorize Senki Zesshou Symphogear as a "Magical Girl" work in the Japanese community.
For example: list of magical girl works on Japanese Wikipedia or magical girl entry on Pixiv Encyclopedia, neither of them includes Symphogear.
I'm not saying we have to follow the Japanese definition, I'm just trying to point out that there is a contradiction between our tag wiki definition/tag literal meaning and actual tagging practice.
The wiki currently uses a narrow definition (requiring traditional tropes like mascots or literal magic).
The actual tagging practice, however, follows the broad definition that include "変身ヒロイン"(henshin hiroine), which some users (like myself) might find somewhat inappropriate.
So I suggest we either keep it narrow, maintain the strict definition for magical_girl and create a new tag (e.g., transformation_heroine or something) to house these sci-fi/toku-inspired characters. Or we update the tag wiki to explicitly include non-magical, sci-fi, and mechanical transformation types to justify the current usage, keep it as the umbrella tag for all "Henshin Heroines". In that case, I still think it would be better to rename it to something that is more accurate in its literal meaning.
Personally, I lean towards distinguishing them. As I mentioned before, these two fetishes are visually differentiated, and their target audiences don't completely overlap. Differentiation helps users find what they want more quickly.
Damian0358 said in forum #437566:
That tag has been present in magical girl's wiki for almost 12 years. Who knows how many posts had or have magical girl incorrectly applied to them?!
How to deal with the large number of history tags is indeed a problem, but no matter the plan, doing it late is better than never...