3-minute wiki-walk (logic)

A 3-minute-wiki-walk is a type of Derren Brown method attack when addressing an argument, making use of the pufferfish effect to prevent opponents sensing a weakness by using speed and a more knowledgeable source of information as a counteraction to a more knowledgeable opponent.

If the source of knowledge is revealed, it's a type of man-in-the-middle attack. Usually a type of anti-ad hominem strawman.

Usage
A 3-minute-wiki-walk is where an individual takes 3 minutes (or so) to skim-read through a subject, either on wikipedia or another webpage, getting a general idea of the scope of the subject, quickly searching online and absorbing pre-existing counter-arguments, and evidence in support of their own position, for usage in response to the poster.

The goal is speed over accuracy (as a perceived delay will seem like stalling), with the aim being to clarify details later on once a response is committed. Ideally a 3-minute-wiki-walk should also be combined with research after the response is made to gain familiarity on the subject.

This is in contrast, even the total opposite, to an adaptive argument attack, which takes time and a lot of questions, or a Derren Brown method, which relies on real-time feeding of information from one adaptive source to another.