Thread:Xtyphooncyclonex/@comment-11987506-20171010154517/@comment-25394636-20171012135051

Indeed, the first half of the description was copied from Maria by Olo72. I had a mistake then. But the rest is different. The only things similar are the intensity and the landfall over Puerto Rico. I've written an entire article on Super Typhoon Choi-wan on 2015 and none of the content, unless edited by others, is copied. The season description of 2041 is also written by me.

Here's a comparison of the rest of Gwen's description and Maria's, extracted from their respective seasons.

Gwen.

However, southerly wind shear began to weaken the storm, thus being downgraded to a high-end category 4 18 hours later, Around 00:00 UTC on September 7, Gwen made landfall near Yauco, Puerto Rico, with winds of 155 mph (250 km/h) and continued its trek traversing the western portion of the island. Due to a weakness in the ridge left by Hurricane Jose, Gwen began to decelerate and turn to the north while over Puerto Rico. Despite land interaction, Gwen maintained its intensity for an additional 42 hours prior to being downgraded to a category 3 on September 9, due to an eyewall replacement cycle. As shear began to decrease along its path, Gwen was briefly upgraded back to a category 4 before encountering less favorable conditions while gradually weakening over the open Atlantic. On September 15, the hurricane began its extratropical transition and was declared post-tropical by the NHC on the following day.

Meanwhile, here's Maria.

Around 08:00 UTC on September 20, the eyewall of Maria struck Vieques, [189]  and a little over two hours later, the core of the storm made landfall near Yabucoa, Puerto Rico, with winds of 155 mph (250 km/h). [190]  Land interaction caused a significant degration in Maria's structure, and it weakened to a Category 2 hurricane while moving offshore. [191]  Growing in size and curving north, Maria regained Category 3 strength and maintained this intensity for several days before entering a less conducive environment. [192]  After fluctuating between tropical storm and minimal hurricane strength off the coastline of North Carolina, [193]  the system turned sharply east away from the United States and ultimately transitioned into an extratropical cyclone over the far northern Atlantic on September 30. [1