#True Super Heavyweight Slash
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tryafandom-blog · 5 years ago
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Found a List
The real list is on Slash Films: https://www.slashfilm.com/disney-movies-and-tv-shows-list/ 
Here’s the copy-pasted version:
Movies
10 Things I Hate About You
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
101 Dalmatians (1961)
101 Dalmatians (1996)
101 Dalmatians 2: Patch’s London Adventure
102 Dalmatians
(500) Days of Summer
The Absent-Minded Professor
The Adventures of André and Wally B.
Adventures in Babysitting (1987)
Adventures in Babysitting (2016
The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin
The Adventures of Huck and Finn
The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad
The African Lion
Aladdin
Aladdin and the King of Thieves
Aladdin II: The Return of Jafar
Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day
Alice in Wonderland (1951)
Alice in Wonderland (2010)
Alice Through the Looking Glass
Aliens of the Deep
Alley Cats Strike
Almost Angels
America’s Heart and Soul
Amy
An Extremely Goofy Movie
Annie
Ant-Man
Ant-Man and The Wasp
Apollo: Missions to the Moon
The Apple Dumpling Gang
The Apple Dumpling Gang Rides Again
The Aristocats
Around the World in 80 Days
Atlantis: Milo’s Return
Atlantis Rising
Atlantis: The Lost Empire
Avalon High
The Avengers
Avengers: Infinity War
Avengers: Age of Ultron
Avengers: Endgame
Babes in Toyland
Baby: Secret of the Lost Legend
Bad Hair Day
Bambi
Bambi 2
The Band Concert
Bao
The Barefoot Executive
The Bears and I
Beauty and the Beast (1991)
Beauty and the Beast (2017)
Beauty and the Beast: Belle’s Magical World
Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas
Beauty and the Briefcase
Bedknobs and Broomsticks
Bedtime Stories
Before the Flood
Benji the Hunted
Beverly Hills Chihuahua
Beverly Hills Chihuahua 2
Beverly Hills Chihuahua 3: Viva La Fiesta
The BFG
Big Business
The Big Green
Big Hero Six
The Biscuit Eater
Bizarre Dinosaurs
The Black Cauldron
The Black Hole
Black Panther
Blackbeard’s Ghost
Blank Check
The Blue Umbrella
Bolt
Boundin’
The Boys: The Sherman Brothers Story
Brave
The Brave Little Toaster Goes to Mars
The Brave Little Toaster to the Rescue
Breaking2
Breaking Away
Bridge to Terabithia
Brink
Brother Bear
Brother Bear 2
Buffalo Dreams
A Bug’s Life
Burn-E
Cadet Kelly
Camp Nowhere
Camp Rock
Camp Rock 2: The Final Jam
Can of Worms
Candleshoe
Captain America: Civil War
Captain America: The First Avenger
Captain Marvel
Cars
Cars 2
Cars 3
Cars Toon: Air Mater
Cars Toon: Hiccups
Cars Toon: Mater Private Eye
Cars Toon: Mater the Greater
Cars Toon: Monster Truck Mater
Cars Toon: Time Travel Mater
Cars Toons: Heavy Metal Mater
Casebusters
The Castaway Cowboy
The Cat from Outer Space
Cheetah
The Cheetah Girls
The Cheetah Girls 2
The Cheetah Girls: One World
Chef Donald
Chicken Little
Christmas Cupid
The Christmas Star
Christopher Robin
The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe
Cinderella (1950)
Cinderella (2015)
Cinderella 2: Dreams Come True
Cinderella 3: A Twist in Time
Cloud 9
Coco
College Road Trip
The Color of Friendship
The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes
Confessions of a Shopaholic
Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen
Cool Runnings
The Count of Monte Cristo
The Country Bears
Cow Belles
D2: The Mighty Ducks
D3: The Mighty Ducks
Dadnapped
Dan in Real Life
Darby O’Gill and the Little People
Davy Crockett and the River Pirates
Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontier
Day and Night
Decorating Disney: Holiday Magic
Den Brother
Descendants
Descendants 2
Diana: In Her Own Words
Diary of a Wimpy Kid
Dick Tracy
Dinosaur
Disney’s A Christmas Carol
Disney’s Fairy Tale Weddings
Disney’s Fairy Tale Weddings: Holiday Magic
Disneynature African Cats
Disneynature Bears
Disneynature Born in China
Disneynature Chimpanzee
Disneynature Crimson Wing
Disneynature Expedition China
Disneynature Ghost of the Mountains
Disneynature Growing Up Wild
Disneynature Monkey Kingdom
Disneynature Oceans
Disneynature Penguins
Disneynature Wings of Life
Doctor Dolittle
Doctor Strange
Don’t Look Under the Bed
Donald and Pluto
Double Teamed
Doug’s 1st Movie
DuckTales the Movie: Treasure of the Lost Lamp
Dug’s Special Mission
Dumbo
Dumbo (Live-Action)
Earth Live
Easter Island Unsolved
Eddie’s Million Dollar Cook-Off
Eight Below
Emil and the Detectives
The Emperorer’s New Groove
Empire of Dreams: The Story of the Star Wars Trilogy
Escape to Witch Mountain
The Even Stevens Movie
Expedition Mars: Spirit and Opportunity
Fantasia
Fantasia 2000
Finding Dory
Finding Nemo
The Finest Hours
First Kid
Flight of the Navigator
The Flood
Flowers and Trees
Flubber
For the Birds
The Fox and the Hound
The Fox and the Hound 2
Frank and Ollie
Frankenweenie (1984)
Frankenweenie (2012)
Freaky Friday (1977)
Freaky Friday (2003)
Freaky Friday (2018)
Free Solo
Frenemies
Frozen
Full-Court Miracle
Fun and Fancy Free
Fuzzbucket
G-Force
The Game Plan
Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties
Geek Charming
Genius
George and A.J.
George of the Jungle
George of the Jungle 2
Get a Clue
The Ghosts of Buxley Hall
Giants of the Deep Blue
Girl vs Monster
Glory Road
Go Figure
The Gods Must Be Crazy
Going to the Mat
The Good Dinosaur
Good Luck Charlie: It’s Christmas!
A Goofy Movie
Gotta Kick It Up
The Great Mouse Detective
The Greatest Game Ever Played
Greyfriars Bobby
Guardians of the Galaxy
Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 2
Halloweentown High
Halloweentown
Halloweentown 2: Kalabar’s Revenge
Hannah Montana: The Movie
Hannah Montana and Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert
Hatching Pete
The Haunted Mansion
Heavyweights
The Help
Herbie: Fully Loaded
Herbie Goes Bananas
Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo
Herbie Rides Again
Hercules
High School Musical
High School Musical 2
High School Musical 3: Senior Year
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
Hocus Pocus
Holes
Holiday in Handcuffs
Home on the Range
Homeward Bound 2: Lost in San Francisco
Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey
Honey, I Shrunk the Kids
Honey, We Shrank Ourselves
Honey, I Blew Up the Kid
Horse Sense
The Horse Whisperer
How Dogs Got Their Shapes
How to Build a Better Boy
The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996)
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
I Am Number Four
I’ll Be Home for Christmas
Ice Age: A Mammoth Christmas
Ice Age: The Great Egg-scapade
Ice Princess
Incredible: The Story of Dr. Pol
The Incredible Dr. Pol: Blue Ribbon Kids
The Incredible Journey
The Incredibles
The Incredibles 2
Inner Workings
Inside Out
Inspector Gadget
Inspector Gadget 2
Into the Grand Canyon
Into the Okavango
Into the Woods
Invincible
Invisible Sister
Iron Man
Iron Man 2
Iron Man 3
Iron Man and Hulk: Heroes United
Iron Will
Jack
Jack-Jack Attack
James and the Giant Peach
Jane
The Jennie Project
John Carter
Johnny Kapahala: Back On Board
Johnny Tsunami
Jonas Brothers: The Concert Experience
The Journey of Natty Gan
Journey to Shark Eden
Journey to the Center of the Earth
Jump In
Jumping Ship
Jungle 2 Jungle
The Jungle Book (1967)
The Jungle Book (2016)
The Jungle Book 2
The Jungle Book: Mowgli’s Story
Jungle Cat
Justin Morgan Had a Horse
Kazaam
The Kid
A Kid in King Arthur’s Court
Kim Possible (2019)
Kim Possible Movie: So the Drama
Kingdom of the Blue Whale
Kronk’s New Groove
La Luna
Lady and the Tramp
Lady and the Tramp 2: Scamp’s Adventure
The Last Song
Lava
The Legend of Mordu
LEGO Star Wars: The Yoda Chronicles – Clash of the Skywalkers
LEGO Star Wars: The Yoda Chronicles – Escape from the Jedi Temple
LEGO Star Wars: The Yoda Chronicles – Race for the Holocrons
LEGO Star Wars: The Yoda Chronicles – Raid on Coruscant
Lemonade Mouth
Lend a Paw
Leroy and Stitch
Let It Shine
Life is Ruff
Life Size 2
Life with Mikey
Lifted
Lilo and Stitch
Lilo and Stitch 2: Stitch Has a Glitch
The Lion King (1994)
The Lion King 1 1/2
The Lion King 2: Simba’s Pride
The Little Mermaid
The Little Mermaid 2: Return to the Sea
The Little Mermaid: Ariel’s Beginning
The Little Whirlwind
The Living Desert
The Lizzie McGuire Movie
The Lone Ranger
Lonesome Ghosts
The Lost Tomb of Alexander the Great
Lou
The Love Bug (1969)
Lovestruck: The Musical
Luck of the Irish
Luxo Jr.
Man Among Cheetahs
The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
Mars: Inside SpaceX
Mars Needs Moms
Marvel Rising: Secret Warriors
Marvel Studios: Assembling a Universe
Marvel Super Hero Adventures: Frost Fight
Mary Poppins
Mary Poppins Returns
Mater and the Ghostlight
Max Keeble’s Big Move
McFarland, USA
Meet the Deedles
Meet the Robinsons
Melody Time
Mickey, Donald, Goofy: The Three Musketeers
Mickey’s House of Villains
Mickey’s Magical Christmas: Snowed in at the House of Mouse
Mickey’s Once Upon a Christmas
Mickey’s Twice Upon a Christmas
The Mighty Ducks
Mighty Joe Young
Mike’s New Car
Million Dollar Arm
The Million Dollar Duck
Minutemen
Miracle
Miracle at Midnight
Miracle in Lane 2
Miracle Landing on the Hudson
Miracle on 34th Street (1947)
Miracle on 34th Street (1994)
Mission to the Sun
The Mistle Tones
Moana
Modern Inventions
Mom’s Got a Date with a Vampire
Monsters, Inc.
Monsters University
Motocrossed
Mr. Boogedy
Mr. Holand’s Opus
Mr. Magoo
Mr. Magorium’s Wonder Emporium
Mulan
Mulan 2
The Muppet Christmas Carol
The Muppet Movie
Muppet Treasure Island
The Muppets (2011)
Muppets Most Wanted
Musical Farmer
My Fake Fiance
My Favorite Martian
My Future Boyfriend
National Treasure
National Treasure: Book of Secrets
Never Been Kissed
Newsies
Newsies: The Broadway Musical
The Nightmare Before Christmas
Now You See It
The Nutcracker and the Four Realms
The Odd Life of Timothy Green
Olaf’s Frozen Adventure
Old Dogs
Old Yeller
Oliver and Company
Once Upon a Mattress
One Magic Christmas
Operation Dumbo Drop
The Other Me
Oz the Great and Powerful
The Pacifier
The Parent Trap (1961)
The Parent Trap (1998)
Paris to Pittsburgh
Partly Cloudy
Party Central
People Like Us
Perri
Pete’s Dragon (1977)
Pete’s Dragon (2016)
Peter Pan
Peter Pan: Return to Neverland
Phantom of the Megaplex
Phineas and Ferb: Mission Marvel
Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension
Piglet’s Big Movie
Pinocchio
Piper
The Pirate Fairy
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales
Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl
The Pixar Story
Pixel Perfect
Pizza My Heart
Planes
Planes: Fire Rescue
Planet of the Birds
Pluto’s Christmas Tree
Pocahontas
Pocahontas 2: Journey to a New World
Pollyana
Pooh’s Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin
Pooh’s Heffalump Movie
The Prince and the Pauper
Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time
The Princess and the Frog
The Princess Diaries
The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement
Princess Protection Program
Prom
The Proof Point
The Proud Family Movie
Queen of Katwe
Quints
Race to Witch Mountain
The Radiator Springs 500 1/2
Ralph Breaks the Internet
Ratatouille
Read It and Weep
Ready to Run
Real Steel
Recess: All Growed Down
Recess: School’s Out
Recess: Taking the 5th Grade
Red’s Dream
The Reluctant Dragon
Remember the Titans
The Rescuers Down Under
Return from Witch Mountain
Return to Halloweentown
Return to Oz
Richie Rich’s Christmas Wish
Right on Track
Riley’s First Date
A Ring of Endless Light
Rip Girls
Robin Hood
The Rocketeer
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
The Rookie
Rookie of the Year
Roving Mars
Ruby Bridges
Sacred Planet
Saludos Amigos
Sammy, the Way-Out Seal
The Sandlot
Sanjay’s Super Team
Santa Buddies: The Legend of Santa Paws
The Santa Clause
The Santa Clause 2
The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Claus
Santa Paws 2: The Santa Pups
Saving Mr. Banks
Science Fair
The Scream Team
Sea of Hope: America’s Underwater Treasures
The Search for Santa Paws
The Secret of the Magic Gourd
Secret of the Wings
Secretariat
Secrets of Christ’s Tomb: Explorer Special
Secrets of Life
Secrets of the King Cobra
The Shaggy D.A.
The Shaggy Dog (1959)
The Shaggy Dog (2006)
Sharks of Lost Island
Sharpay’s Fabulous Adventure
Shipwrecked
The Sign of Zorro
The Simpsons Movie
Sister Act
Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit
The Skeleton Dance
Sky High
Skyrunners
Sleeping Beauty
Smart House
Snow
Snow 2: Brain Freeze
Snow Buddies
Snow Dogs
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
Snowball Express
Snowglobe (2007)
Solo: A Star Wars Story
The Sorcerer’s Apprentice
The Sound of Music
Space Buddies
Spacecamp
Splash
Spooky Buddies
Star Wars: A New Hope
Star Wars: Attack of the Clones
Star Wars: Return of the Jedi
Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith
Star Wars: The Clone Wars (2008)
Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back
Star Wars: The Force Awakens
Star Wars: The Last Jedi
Star Wars: The Phantom Menace
Starstruck
Steamboat Willie
Stepsister from Planet Weird
Stitch! the Movie
Stonehenge Decoded: Secrets Revealed
The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men
Straight Talk
Strange Magic
The Strongest Man in the World
Stuck in the Suburbs
The Suite Life Movie
Sultan and the Rock Star
Super Buddies
The Swap
Sweet Home Alabama
Swing Vote
Swiss Family Robinson (1960)
Swiss Family Robinson
The Sword in the Stone
Tall Tale
Tangled
Tangled: Before Ever After
Tangled Ever After
Tarzan
Tarzan 2
Tarzan and Jane (2002)
Teachers Pet
Teen Beach 2
Teen Beach Movie
Teen Spirit
That Darn Cat (1965)
That Darn Cat (1977)
The Thirteenth Year
Thor
Thor: Ragnarok
Thor: The Dark World
The Three Caballeros
Those Calloways
Three Days
Three Little Pigs
Three Men and a Baby
Three Men and a Little Lady
The Three Musketeers
Tiger Cruise
The Tigger Movie
‘Til Dad do us Part
Tini: The New Life of Violetta
Tinker Bell
Tinker Bell and the Great Fairy Rescue
Tinker Bell and the Legend of the Neverbeast
Titanic: 20 Years Later with James Cameron
Tom and Huck
Tomorrowland
Toy Story
Toy Story 2
Toy Story 3
Toy Story Toons: Hawaiian Vacation
Toy Story Toons: Partysaurus Rex
Toy Story Toons: Small Fry
Trail of the Panda
Treasure Buddies
Treasure Island
Treasure of Matecumbe
Treasure Planet
Tree Climbing Lions
Tron
Tron Legacy
Tru Confessions
Tuck Everlasting
Turner and Hooch
Twas the Night
Twitches
Twitches Too
U.S. Secret Service: On the Front Line
The Ugly Daschund
The Ultimate Christmas Present
Under the Sea: A Descendants Short Story
Under the Tuscan Sun
Underdog
Unidentified Flying Oddball
Up
Up, Up, and Away
Valiant
The Vanishing Prairie
Waking Sleeping Beauty
Wall-E
Walt and El Grupo
Wendy Wu: Homecoming Warrior
What About Bob?
When In Rome
While You Were Sleeping
Whispers: An Elephant’s Tale
White Fang
Who Framed Roger Rabbit
The Wild
Willow
Winged Seduction: Birds of Paradise
Winnie the Pooh
Winnie the Pooh: A Very Merry Pooh Year
Winnie the Pooh: Springtime with Roo
The Wise Little Hen
The Wizards Return: Alex vs Alex
Wizards of Waverly Place: The Movie
World’s Greatest Dogs
Wreck-it Ralph
A Wrinkle in Time
You Again
You Lucky Dog
You Wish
The Young Black Stallion
Your Friend the Rat
Zapped
Zenon: Girl of the 21st Century
Zenon: The Zequel
Zenon: Z3
Zombies (2018)
Zootopia
Television Shows
The 7D
101 Dalmatians
Adventures of the Gummi Bears
Agent Carter
Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
American Dragon: Jake Long
Andi Mack
A.N.T. Farm
Ant-Man Shorts
Austin and Ally
Avengers Assemble
The Avengers: Earth’s Mightiest Heroes
Avengers: Secret Wars (Shorts)
The Avengers: United They Stand
Best Friends Whenever
Big City Greens
Big City Greens (Shorts)
Big Hero 6: The Series
Big Hero 6: The Series (Shorts)
Billy Dilley’s Super Duper Subterranean Summer
Bizaardvark
Bonkers
The Book of Once Upon a Time
The Book of Pooh
Boy Meets World
Brain Games
Brandy and Mr. Whiskers
Bug Juice: My Adventures at Camp
Bunk’d
Chip n Dale: Rescue Rangers
Coop and Cami Ask the World
Coop and Cami Ask the World (Shorts)
Crash and Bernstein
Darkwing Duck
Descendants: Wicked World (Shorts)
Disney’s Fairy Tale Weddings
Disney Junior Music Nursery Rhymes
Doc McStuffins
Dog Whisperer with Caesar Millan
Doug
Dr. K’s Exotic Animal ER
Dr. Oakley, Yukon Vet
Drain the Oceans
DuckTales (1987)
DuckTales (2017)
DuckTales Shorts
Elena of Avalor (Shorts)
The Emperor’s New School
Even Stevens
Fantastic Four (1994)
Fantastic Four: World’s Greatest Heroes
Fast Layne
Gargoyles
Girl Meets World
Goldie and Bear
Good Luck Charlie
Goof Troop
Gordon Ramsay: Uncharted
Gravity Falls
Gravity Falls: Shorts
Great Migrations
Guardians of the Galaxy (2015)
Guardians of the Galaxy (Shorts)
Handy Manny
Henry Hungglemonster
Hercules
Hostile Planet
I Didn’t Do It
Imagination Movers
The Incredible Dr. Pol
The Incredible Hulk
Inhumans
Iron Man (1994)
Iron Man: Armored Adventures
Jake and the Never Land Pirates
Jessie
JONAS
K.C. Undercover
Kickin’ It
Kim Possible
Kingdom of the White Wolf
Kirby Buckets
Lab Rats
Lab Rats: Elite Force
Legend of the Three Caballeros
LEGO Disney Frozen: Northern Lights (Shorts)
LEGO Star Wars: All Stars
LEGO Star Wars: Droid Tales
LEGO Star Wars: The Freemaker Adventures
LEGO Star Wars: The Resistance Rises
Life Below Zero
Lilo and Stitch
The Lion Guard
Little Einsteins
The Little Mermaid
Liv and Maddie
Lizzie McGuire (2001)
Lost Treasures of the Maya
Marvel Rising: Initiation
Marvel’s Rocket and Groot
Marvel’s Spider-Man (Shorts)
Marvel Super Hero Adventures
Marvel Ultimate Comics
Mech X4
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse
Mickey and the Roadster Racers
Mickey Mouse (Shorts)
Mighty Ducks
Mighty Med
Miles from Tomorrowland
Milo Murphy’s Law
Miraculous Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir
Muppet Babies
Muppet Moments (Shorts)
The Muppets
My Friends Tigger and Pooh
The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
One Strange Rock
Origins: The Journey of Humankind
Out of the Box
Phil of the Future
Phineas and Ferb
PJ Masks
Puppy Dog Pals
Quack Pack
Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade Ninja
Raven’s Home
Recess
The Replacements
Rocky Mountain Animal Rescue
Shake it Up
Sheriff Callie’s Wild West
Silver Surfer (1998)
The Simpsons
Smart Guy
So Weird
Sofia the First
Sonny With a Chance
Soy Luna
Special Agent Oso
Spider-Man (1981)
Spider-Man (1994)
Spider-Man and his Amazing Friends
Spider-Man Unlimited
Spider-Woman (1979)
Star vs the Forces of Evil
Star Wars Blips
Star Wars: Forces of Destiny (Shorts)
Star Wars: Rebels
Star Wars: Rebels (Shorts)
Star Wars: Resistance
Star Wars: The Clone Wars
Stuck in the Middle
The Suite Life of Zack and Cody
The Suite Life on Deck
Supercar Megabuild
Sydney to the Max
Take Two with Phineas and Ferb (Shorts)
Talespin
Tangled: The Series
Tangled: Short Cuts (Shorts)
Teachers Pet
That’s So Raven
Timon and Pumbaa
Tron: Uprising
Ultimate Spider-Man
Vampirina
Violetta
Walk the Prank
Wild Yellowstone
Wizards of Waverly Place
Wolverine and the X-Men
X-Men (1992)
X-Men Evolution
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sempiternalsandpitturtle · 6 years ago
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Why keyword discovery needs to be the centre of your SEO strategy
No, you haven’t travelled back in time – it’s 2019, Axl and Slash are sharing a stage again and keywords are still important in your SEO strategy.
What a time to be alive.
True, the keyword has had a rough time of it  – its death has been proclaimed from on high by many a marketing guru. However, we’re here to tell you to put the handkerchiefs away – keywords are going nowhere fast.
To prove it, in this article I’ll counter some of the ‘keywords are redundant’ arguments. I’ll also examine the benefits of good keyword research, and show you some tools for generating your own.
Aren’t keywords dead?
If you’ve read one of the gazillion articles out there about the post-keyword-apocalypse world we apparently live in, it’s likely that at least one of the following reasons were given for the keyword’s untimely ‘demise’:
1. Algorithmic updates
Google has undergone several algorithmic changes in recent years, but the most important from a keyword perspective was Google Penguin.
Penguin sought to bring law and order to what was a wild west world of keyword mayhem. Its aim was to lower the ranking of websites that engaged in manipulative link schemes and/or keyword stuffing.
Keyword stuffing was the unnatural repetition of certain target words or phrases in order to perform well when users Googled these terms. This isn’t good to read and doesn’t provide the searcher with real value – so Google decided it needed to go.
What this means for you now
This doesn’t mean keywords are dead – they’re still crucial signposts that help match your content to a user’s intent. Penguin simply requires us marketers to use them with a little more intelligence.
What Google intended to do with Penguin was to say, ‘Don’t write for us, write for your readers’ – meaning that keywords are deployed naturally, rather than shoe-horned in at every opportunity. Infinitely achievable.
Don’t believe the hype. Keyword research is not dead. It is still a vitally important part of any #contentmarketing strategy. So, if you work in the finance industry, here are some actionable #tips to ace your next keyword research project. https://t.co/CqJmsC8Qa3 pic.twitter.com/i9Io7JjrHl
— Castleford Media (@castlefordmedia) 19 December 2018
2. Ambiguous analytics
In a now far-off fairytale time, Google Analytics used to provide detailed data on top keyword drivers for every site – cue heaven’s choir.
However, in 2010 Google began quietly removing this information – cue sad violin. At the time this was touted as the beginning of the end for keywords, but here, again, the gun was prematurely jumped.
Sure, we lost a valuable way of tracking our keywords, but the validity of the terms themselves was left untouched. People were still searching in the same way, and Google still used these queries to find relevant content
3. The growth of voice search
One advance that has changed how we search is the growth of voice activation. By 2020, it’s predicted that 50 per cent of searches will be conducted through speech as opposed to typing, according to Comscore.
The trend towards voice search has had two interesting impacts on how we search:
We waffle more – It seems we all like the sound of our own voices. Data from Google shows that 70 per cent of queries to its Assistant use ‘natural’ language, as opposed to traditional, shorter keyword phrases.
We leave out significant keywords – Google Assistant is able to string searches together and use context to work out what you’re looking for. Take a look at this example used by Search Engine Journal:
youtube
Does this means that keywords are dead? It’s still a no from me. We simply need to consider them in the same way that voice search does – i.e. in conjunction with each other, not in a vacuum.
Benefits of good keyword research
Okay, so we’ve brought Lazarus back from the dead. Now, what can he do for us?
The title of this article focuses on the centrality of keywords in SEO strategy, and for good reason. They’re far more than just signals for Google (though they’re damn good for that) – as we’ll see here:
Gaining a better understanding of your customers
Much like Voldemort and his horcruxes, your customers give away a little bit of themselves every time they create a search. It’s your job to defeat them and claim the Elder Wand for yourself put these clues together and build a holistic picture of your target market.
By conducting thorough keyword research you can answer questions like: What makes my customers tick? What are their pain points? How can I provide the value they seek? Even better, by analysing the wording they use, you can adapt the tone and style of your website content to speak their language.
Keyword discovery, therefore, becomes a crucial part of creating user personas – essential documents that will inform much of your future marketing efforts.
User personas may sound like an unnecessary process, but they are the key to good quality content. Don’t believe me? Check out our reasons why. https://t.co/HLd89bVlvj pic.twitter.com/G2NEuyczlo
— Castleford Media (@castlefordmedia) 18 January 2019
Planning your content
Using a strategy to create a strategy, how … strategic.
I promise I’m not trying to overcomplicate things – a great keyword strategy can help you plan your content to achieve maximum impact.
The search terms your target market is using will show you where they are in the sales funnel. Have they already expressed an explicit interest in a product or service that you provide, or are they simply looking for some inspiration?
Meeting this intent head on, with tailored, compelling content means you’ll have a better chance of your website ending up in front of their eyes, as opposed to your competition’s.
Making your editorial better
When it comes to editorial, many people think that keywords are simply there to tell you what subjects to cover to improve your ranking.
Not true.
Ever heard of cornerstone content? The guys at Yoast SEO sum this concept up well, describing cornerstone content as “usually relatively long, informative articles, combining insights from different blog posts and covering everything that’s important about a certain topic.”
Keyword research really comes into its own here. It allows you to group common search terms around a topic, and create one comprehensive piece that sets out to answer them all.
Let’s take this article as an example. I’m working off something we at Castleford call a Search Performance Brief (SPB) – this super handy guide gives me all kinds of useful info based on research by our strategy team.
I can’t give away too much of our secret source, but by jumping through as many of these hoops as possible I have a better chance of creating a high-ranking piece of content about which minstrels will sing songs for centuries to come.
The days of quantity over quality in terms of #socialmedia posting are over. Today, your content needs to hit the mark every time. Here’s why. https://t.co/qwxWMfziox pic.twitter.com/2J1lHjIPcw
— Castleford Media (@castlefordmedia) 25 February 2019
Getting noticed
Last, but certainly not least – keywords help you get found.
No matter if you’re trying to sell tea to pensioners or chatbots to banks – you need to be heard above the din that is the modern digital world.
This is why we all care about keywords in the first place, right? They’re signposts that point people to you, getting your brand and services in front of users at the very moment they’re looking for what you’re offering.
How to generate keywords
Keywords are generally sorted into one of two categories: short tail or long tail.
Short tail keywords consist of one or two words, and aren’t highly specific. For example, ‘keyword discovery’.
Long tail keywords are (shockingly) longer terms (a minimum of three words) that target a more distinct niche – e.g. ‘why is keyword discovery important for SEO strategy’.
Which should I be targeting?
The short answer is long tail – they account for 70 per cent of monthly searches for a reason (Moz). Here’s why:
There’s less competition: More specific terms have fewer people searching for them, meaning that your content has a better chance of ranking higher up the search engine results page (SERP).
You’ll be targeting the right people: General terms are likely to attract traffic from people who aren’t interested in your particular offering. Be picky with your keyword selection so Google can match your business with the most qualified searchers.
People (and the algorithm) want you to: People tend to type (or speak) as they think – i.e. in sentences, not two-word outbursts. The Google Hummingbird update sought to mirror this in the search algorithm by matching exact phrasings more frequently.
Dive deep to find those long tail keywords.
  The trick is finding the sweet spot between traffic and competition. You don’t want to be so niche that no one ever searches your chosen term, but competing for highly sought after keywords is obviously more difficult.
Sound tough? Fear not – heaps of tools exist to help you find keywords that will boost your site’s SEO performance. Here we’ll look at four of our favourites:
1. Moz’s Keyword Explorer
Moz is an SEO heavyweight, thanks largely to the great range of tools it offers. Keyword Explorer is a fine example of this, presenting an easy-to-use (and free!) mechanism for finding keywords galore.
It boasts a 95 per cent accuracy rate when predicting the search volume of a term, and allows you to target long tail keywords posed in the form of questions. As we’ve seen, this is particularly important in light of Google Hummingbird and the increasing prevalence of voice search.
2. Google Keyword Planner
Google Keyword Planner allows you to get info from the very beast you’re trying to placate. While designed for search ad campaigns, its insights can be used for organic content too – after all, when users search, they don’t specify whether they see paid or free results.
All you need to do is plug in a few phrases important to your business, and you’ll be able to determine the competition and traffic that each receives.
Performance on search engines is critical to content marketing success. As these platforms become more advanced, it's critical to understand semantic search. https://t.co/JDYZDWmRUs pic.twitter.com/Q1trHupUrK
— Castleford Media (@castlefordmedia) 17 December 2018
3. SEMrush Keyword Magic Tool
With over 9.4 billion keywords in its database and covering 118 countries, SEMrush’s Keyword Magic Tool takes a comprehensive approach to search term research.
A particularly useful function of this tool is SERP Features. This gives you insights into special results on a SERP, and how they relate to keywords. Rich snippets, knowledge graphs and carousels are all highly coveted, as they stand out to the reader.
With SERP Features you can, for example, enter a domain name, filter through its organic rankings and discover which keywords trigger SERP features. You can then use this knowledge in your approach to try and seize strategic positions on the SERP. Huzzah!
4. AHREFS Keywords Explorer
The advanced metrics you get with AHREFS Keywords Explorer are excellent, giving visibility on factors like percentage of clicks, percentage of paid clicks and clicks per search. You can also study the return rate, the number of times people search for that keyword again, as well as SEO metrics from top-ranking pages and how they’ve fared over the past year.
from http://bit.ly/2GhSD3u
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dapperkobold · 7 years ago
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Review at Random: Diablo 3
Just finished the main plotline of Diablo 3, and I have some thoughts on it. If you’re settling in to hear my analysis of its in-depth systems... don’t. I just finished my first playthrough of the basic story, and while it’s a good game those in-depth systems I basically didn’t notice.
Presentation
The Diablo series of games is pretty much the iconic example of the isometric hack and slash RPG, and while not a lot wowed me the presentation is without a doubt solid. Graphics, performance, voice acting, music, UI, it’s all really solid. I never hit a bad bug, or something that was just ugly, or wonky voice acting, or any such nonsense.
You’ll spend a lot of time in dungeons, and the rest of the time in I-can’t-believe-it’s-not-a-dungeons, and each dungeon has its own unique tileset and atmosphere. Really, they clearly went the extra mile to get good graphics and environmental details, such as one point when you’re on the walls of a fort and sometimes you can look down and see a battle raging on the ground, without letting them overtake the gameplay and writing.
That said, those dungeons aren’t perfect and especially the longer ones with larger floors got a little monotonous. More on this later, but the issue is partially presentation; I realize that these dungeons are procedurally generated but having one or two kinds of halls and maybe half a dozen rooms per tileset was FAR too few. Since those tilesets are really the core of the presentation of the game, it was disappointing. 
Overall, while everything was solid nothing was spectacular. Nothing really made me stop and say “that’s so pretty!” I don’t want to really force games to do that to please me, but it’s still an area that could have used improvement. Nothing even was too shocking to me, each area has a custom tileset but never really has a surprise in store. As a result I really focused on the gameplay and story instead of the presentation, which I’m all for but doesn’t really say good things about the presentation itself.
There is one more issue, though. I feel a need to address it because it has a sizable impact on the game: The always on-line connection. Now, I’m not militantly against always on-line games. I’ll sigh about it, I’ll roll my eyes about it, I’ll note a good long list of reasons why it’s a bad idea if asked, but I’ll generally only throw a snit over it if there is just NO reason to enforce an always on-line model. For example, Overwatch is so focused on online play that singleplayer is borderline unheard of, so an always on-line connection is (while still not needed from my point of view) understandable.
Diablo 3 has NO excuse.
Yes, it does have a co-op mode, yes it has challenges, BUT that’s no reason to lock the singleplayer campaign from offline access. And this has been a problem for me, Diablo 3 has the touchiest netcode of any game I have ever played. I’ve had this game for a long time (since the necromancer expansion) and only now have I gotten around to finishing it, because every time it was “but do I want to suffer the threat of it disconnecting right now?” This game has disconnected me more than any other online game I have ever played, including ones I have logged a lot more time in.
Yes, it is honestly that bad. The saving is consistent enough that I never lost a meaningful amount of progress (with one weird exception) but it was just aggravating enough for no good reason that I’d go as far as to call it this game’s fatal flaw.
Final Presentation Sore: B
A solid core, no doubt, but the not enough breadth in the tilesets and no wow factor for extra credit keeps this at an A or A-. Then the connection issues kick it down a letter grade. YES, I am that grumpy about them.
Gameplay
The real meat of this game, make no doubt, this is clearly a very deep complex and nuanced system I do not give a whit about!
...yeah.
Class mechanics seem solid. Okay. Mechanical character customization? Mainly just what you choose for your ability loadout. The famous loot? I basically just equipped up a new piece when the total + from the three broad categories was more than the total - and I was fine.
“But but but what about elemental damage, and heal on kill vs heal per attack, and intelligence vs dexterity, and thorns vs straight damage?” I didn’t care. The game did not explain how all the stats worked together, I did not need to know how the interactions worked out, I just played through and had some fun. Did this result in me making less than idea decisions? Yes. 100%. I likely would have made MORE nonideal decisions if I had all the information, that’s just the kind of person I am!
But I didn’t care, and didn’t need to care. I guess that could have a good spin on it, ‘good depth for those who care that can be ignored by those who don’t’, but I’m not sure it’s quite that true. You see, I’ve only completed one run through on Expert level, and it was pretty easy. I only died once, chasing a treasure goblin into a mass of angry super-enemies, and after that I only really gave respect to arcane enemies and other outliers that did a lot more than normal damage. For all I know that becomes massively untrue on higher difficulties, it’s possible that by clicking over to torment you suddenly need to actually know stuff to go anywhere.
That said, ‘Expert’ could have afforded to be more challenging. I basically found one loadout of skills that I used the entire way through, never changing because I never hit something that it couldn’t take on. I was playing a crusader, if it matters, but I solved basically all my issues by throwing hammers or occasionally calling down a sky laser. Ideally a ‘takes all comers’ loadout should have trouble in one situation or another, but the only time I changed was when A. I got a bit of equipment that gave a huge boost to something or B. I got a new customization option that did it better.
And I know what you’re saying. You’re saying ‘so turn up the difficulty!’ You can’t turn it up past expert on your first play-through. I would have if I could have.
It doesn’t help that basically all the enemies are interchangeable. Okay, I mean, sure some have range attacks, and some have knockback, and some cast spells, but there’s nothing I hit that made me say ‘ooh, these are trouble!’ Or ‘oh this is bad’ other than running into two groups of rares at the same time. I just tanked and threw hammers. Sometimes straight hammers, sometimes hammerangs, sometimes sky lasers, sometimes I became big so I could throw infinite hammerangs for a bit. I never found a situation that made me change up my strategy.
The only monsters I remember as being of note are the tremblers, because I thought at first they were protected from the front but they weren’t, the fat demon casters that were annoying, and the punishers from the start of the expansion act because I recognized them from Heroes of the Storm. Turns out they were just generic big enemies with hops.
Yes, maybe it is my fault for not experimenting more, but I was just never given a reason to experiment. And if the problem isn’t there at higher difficulties, why force the player to play at ‘low’ difficulties the first time through?
That said, the mechanics clearly are very in-depth, and barring when it drags on it IS A fun game, make no mistake. It’s just that it does tend to drag on.
This isn’t helped by the dungeons being large and not having much variety. Yes, I already said this above but it’s true for mechanics, too. There’s basically no puzzles or challenges of wit, just enemies, things to loot, doors, and the occasional trap. The big exception to this is a keep level where you need to activate things or defend some NPCs for a bit, but that’s the only time I remember odd mechanics other than one quick townsfolk saving bit. I seem to vaguely remember something from a prison that was slightly unusual, but I think that just boiled down to activating a thing before killing the things.
Maybe this just isn’t for me. I dunno.
Final Gameplay Score: C+
The gameply isn’t bad, or even just disappointing, just... not a big deal. It’s a little disappointing, I guess, to not have to worry about the advanced systems even a little. It was too easy and became monotonous, but (despite my gripes) it’s not a bad game. Maybe it’s just not my thing, but by the end I just didn’t care.
Writing
I had heard good things about the writing in this game. I went in with high hopes, and was... well, I was a little disappointed. It has a good plot for a non-narrative-focused game, but it wouldn’t make it in the ring if put up against gaming history’s writing heavyweights. A lot of the twists are really obvious, not a single one of the villains are the least bit trope-savy, and the logic partaken in by some of the characters is laughable.
Likely this game’s biggest saving grace is some of the character writing, however. There’s a fair amount of it scattered around and a good chunk is quality stuff. My favorite characters are, without a doubt, Lyndon the Scoundrel and Covetous Shen.
Neither of those are main characters. It’s that kind of game.
That said, I would like to take a moment to give a shoutout to whoever wrote the Crusader’s dialogue. This is how you do Lawful Good without being a pain, people. If you want to play a paladin in D&D or Pathfinder and want to know how to do it without being That One Paladin, check out the D3 Crusader.
Final Writing Score: B+
The poor plot logic is the vast majority of lost points here, but some honestly lovable characters and solid writing around the shaky plot means that it’s still enjoyable.
Overall
I mean... it’s fine?
Okay, this game is a success, and it deserves to be a success make no mistake, but it’s not amazing. The gameplay doesn’t stand out for me, the presentation doesn’t stand out for me, and while some of the character bits are good the core plot is pretty trite stuff. There was no one point where I went ‘ooh’, no one thing that grabbed me. Maybe it’s meant to be played several times, with friends, and I’d be all for playing it some more with friends, but it doesn’t really stand tall enough that I want to turn around and play it again right away.
Presentation: B
Gameplay: C+
Writing: B+
FINAL GRADE: B
It’s fine, make no mistake.
Awards:
Fatal Flaw
Get an Interior Decorator
The Most Honest Thief You Will Ever Meet
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mecha-gifs · 9 years ago
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Finishing Move Friday: God Gravion & Sol Gravion - True Super Heavyweight Slash
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