The phase 2 of the burnination process described here is completed and it has been decided that the tag should be renamed to [game-development].
Currently, the gaming tag has 376 questions, most of which are relating to the creation of games or creation of game-related plugins/software, etc. I don't see the point in this tag because it conveys no real information. It's overly broad and doesn't give the reader any more information than the title does.
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
Sure, it can be used to describe the contents of the question, but not very effectively. Gaming could relate to creating games, or game-related programs. It doesn't do anything in most cases because the title already provides the information, such as https://stackoverflow.com/questions/47795818/puzzle-game-using-c-sharp-windows-form. The title already conveys the fact they're creating a puzzle game, and the question itself is unclear and asking for a debug-pls. The tag encourages bad debug-pls and broad questions with no real use, and itself is broad.Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
No. Gaming could be used to categorize questions regarding the creation of games/game-related content, but that has no real need. Gaming itself is off topic for Stack Overflow.Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
No.Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
It's overly broad and can relate to games, game creation, gamification, etc. Some suited for GameDev.SE and others just plain off topic.
business applications
tag, so why have agaming
tag. The point is that by virtue of naming an entire class of applications, this tag is general enough that any good question on it would just as easily apply to other classes of applications. By the way, we do have ascientific-computing
tag, and I wonder if it has the same type of problems.[gaming]
is too broad of a tag IMO.[game-development]
is not overly precise, like a specific technology or framework would be, but I disagree that[game-development]
is too broad to be a tag.[game-development]
could be used to ask questions about algorithms or approaches popular in developing games, without asking for a specific language or framework implementation.