Have you found a glaring error on NSWpedia? Or a hidden gem of local history? Let us know in the comments below.

Many pages are abandoned. A page for “Transport for NSW” might describe a bus route that was cancelled in 2016. Because there is no active editor for that topic, the error persists indefinitely. The Comparison: NSWpedia vs. The Alternatives | Feature | NSWpedia | Wikipedia | Professional Source (e.g. Dictionary of Sydney) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Depth of trivial local info | Excellent | Poor | Non-existent | | Fact-checking speed | Slow / Non-existent | Fast | Moderate (Peer review) | | Citation requirement | Weak | Strict | Mandatory | | Vandalism protection | Low | High | N/A | | Best use case | Starting point | General verification | Final citation | The Verdict: How to Use NSWpedia Safely Is NSWpedia reliable? Rarely on its own.

Unlike academic journals or professional news sites, NSWpedia has no formal fact-checking process. Articles about controversial topics (e.g., native land rights disputes, local development scandals) often reflect the bias of the single author who wrote them. You will find “puff pieces” for local businesses presented as history, and hit-jobs on former mayors presented as fact.

Having spent a few days digging through the site, comparing entries to primary sources, and stress-testing its claims, here is the honest breakdown of NSWpedia’s reliability. First, let’s give credit where it’s due. For a niche, state-focused wiki, NSWpedia fills a valuable gap.

In the age of digital information, we’ve grown used to adding “wiki” or “pedia” to the end of a word to describe a crowdsourced knowledge base. Enter NSWpedia —a site that positions itself as a comprehensive encyclopedia for all things New South Wales, from local history and regional politicians to obscure suburban facts.

The better articles on NSWpedia include robust footnotes linking to Trove (the National Library of Australia’s digital archive), old government gazettes, or physical books. If you see those blue links, the reliability index goes up significantly. The Bad: The Red Flags You Cannot Ignore However, “passion” is not the same as “verification.” NSWpedia has several structural issues that force you to treat it with caution.

Because NSWpedia lacks the massive moderation army of Wikipedia, vandalism sticks around longer. In my review, I found one entry for a small Hunter Valley town that listed the local member as a fictional character from Bluey . It had been there for eleven months. On Wikipedia, that would last eleven minutes .

But the burning question for researchers, students, and curious locals is simple: