I think it's labeled as "exotic" because it's installed from a GitHub URL, rather than from the npm registry. So it's an "exotic" package, meaning foreign or non-native.
My interpretation is that this is a dev-friendly warning that you are doing something "exotic" and that npm/yarn can't detect for you whether this package has become outdated.
I looked in the npm/npm
repo (and some other npm
-related repos), but I couldn't find the text exotic
, so it must originate from their (private) registry API? I did find some handling of exotic
in the yarnpkg/yarn
repo though, for reference: https://github.com/yarnpkg/yarn/blob/a3ce7c702f644efde783beb8e0b99dc08100f0df/src/package-request.js#L408
4.0.0-alpha.2
is non-standard due to the alpha suffix; so isn't easily parsed and gets labeled as exotic. If anyone knows why for sure it would be interesting to find out