I am trying to honor the compromise, Unionpoint. Tons of characters who wouldn't normally warrant their own page have gotten summaries on Characters (minor) and personally, I think it's been working very well. There's a huge difference though between characters like Ensign Parker and Dorahlian Uniformed Guard #1. The latter of which is so unimportant to the narrative of the episodes and the series there's no way to justify his existence on any page. I agreed to allow you to write about characters that have a purpose, but not enough information or distinctive enough traits to warrant their own page. Not every single characters that appears in a frame or utters a single line of dialogue.
Aspirations to make this Wiki a resource for all Orville related information is a noble task, and one that I'm in agreement with wanting to pursue. "All Orville related" information that's worth documenting though. As has been stated by FishTank. dozens of times, even formal Encyclopedias with the same goal don't write about every single character or location that appears no matter how minor. I own a Star Wars Encyclopedia that is advertised to be an ultimate resource on the entire universe on all the movies in the saga. They don't a summary dedicated to the Stormtrooper who banged his head on the doorway in A New Hope. Because that has nothing to do with the Star Wars or the greater narrative of the movies or their plots/world. It's the same application here.
When I talk about wanting to write a true Orville Encyclopedia I mean that I want to document the great characters and world Seth MacFarlane has built. The main crew on the Bridge, the planets that have entire episodes dedicated to them, etc. That's what I want to write about it and what, from the available stats, people come here wanting to read. The Orville isn't about faceless guards or random planet names, it's about a group of humans and aliens who explore the universe with incredible technology. That despite their circumstances are still held back by the basic philosophical questions and emotional queries we struggle with even 400 years earlier. That's what an Orville Encyclopedia should be about, not blink and you'll miss it props that contribute nothing to that narrative that makes the show what it is.