@asticknodesuser1
Joined on May 26th, 2023, this user has been a member for 1,109 days and is the 234,361st person to register an account.
Has 2 submissions, the first one uploaded on and the most recent on .
Of those, 0 have been featured and 0 have won Users' Choice.
On average, each submission earns 0 downloads.
In total, they have been download 0 times.
Counting every individual stickfigure, including the contents of all packs, this user has technically made and submitted 0 stickfigures.
On average, when this user rates stickfigures, they are 75% positive.
Also, they are typically 100% positive when rating animation spotlights.
Has made 37 comments on non-activity pages of the site. Alternatively, this user has made 1,618 comments on actual activity pages of the site.
This member is not a Users' Choice voter.
Show More
Friendly reminder that…Owner
Firedragon165’s Video Game ScreenshotsOwner
Firedragon165’s JWE2 Park BuildsOwner
Group where you can learn stuff you could’ve gone your whole life without knowingOwner
Firedragon’s groupadmin
Evil >:]admin
Tellure’s Music Reccomendationsadmin
The Frames™mod
Nodependiummod
AniNodesmod
Chevy’s autofaxmod
Thenodedudes private STK releasesmod
The STICK NODES BULLETINmod
-
@ralph site update idea. You know when you first make a post or comment and the edit button is there? But then later it disappears? Make it so that you can edit posts no matter how old they are
-
Replying to comment by:
Just draw on paper then trace. Also you forgot the @ralph
-
The answer to the impossible riddleThe prisoner goes to the box with their number. If their number is there, they get out and let the next person go in. If their number isn’t there, they have to go to the box which has the number on the palate they found. Keep doing this till they find their number.
Ex: Prisoner 1 goes to box 1. He finds paper 8. He goes to box 8. He finds paper 48. He goes to box 48. And so on until his 40 tries are up or when he finds his paper.
There is about a 33% chance of them succeeding.
-
Replying to comment by:
Don’t forget https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=eVTXPUF4Oz4&pp=ygUKSW4gdGhlIGVuZA%3D%3D
-
Replying to comment by:
I’ll do it for you. @idkanims I challenge you to a ratio
-
Replying to comment by:
-
Replying to comment by:
Damn that looks cool, brachiosaurus?
-
The Impossible Riddle100 prisoners are sentenced to death, but they get a chance to survive. Each prisoner goes in a room one by one. There are 100 boxes in the room. The boxes have papers with numbers 1-100. All boxes are labeled with numbers
Ex: box one has the number 1 on it, box 2 has the number 2 on it and so on.
Each prisoner is also assigned a number. The first one has the number 1, the second has 2, the third has 3 and so on.
The goal is to find your own paper in 50 tries. The papers are randomly placed in different boxes.
Ex: Paper 2 might be in box 50, paper 100 might be in box 76
Only one prisoner can go in at a time, and they can’t talk to the other prisoners when they find their number. They can discuss strategies before. What is the best strategy?
-
Replying to comment by:
The channel is a kid
So? Your probably also a kid.
-
Replying to comment by:
What
-
Replying to comment by:
Time for more site news
@zaphgaming has unlocked Node Sculptor and received the trophy of “Natalie’s Honey Flask”, a 43% rare trophy, don’t let it go to your head
This is very useful data.
-
Replying to comment by:
I am vengeance, I am the night, I am Batman!
-
My last post was incorrect, and that’s probably because I was tired and lazy, but this one I’m sure is not.
The Great AttractorThe Great Attractor is a region of gravitational attraction in intergalactic space and the apparent central gravitational point of the Laniakea Supercluster of galaxies that includes the Milky Way galaxy, as well as about 100,000 other galaxies.
The observed attraction suggests a localized concentration of mass on the order of 1016 solar masses. However, it is obscured by the Milky Way’s galactic plane, lying behind the Zone of Avoidance (ZOA), so that in visible light wavelengths, the Great Attractor is difficult to observe directly.
The attraction is observable by its effect on the motion of galaxies and their associated clusters over a region of hundreds of millions of light-years across the universe. These galaxies are observable above and below the Zone of Avoidance; all are redshifted in accordance with the Hubble flow, indicating that they are receding relative to us and to each other, but the variations in their redshifts are large enough and regular enough to reveal that they are slightly drawn towards the attraction. The variations in their redshifts are known as peculiar velocities, and cover a range from about +700 km/s to −700 km/s, depending on the angular deviation from the direction to the Great Attractor.
The Great Attractor itself is moving towards the Shapley Supercluster. Recent astronomical studies by a team of South African astrophysicists revealed a supercluster of galaxies, termed the Vela Supercluster, in the Great Attractor’s theorized location.
-
We don’t know what dinosaurs looked likeSure, we have fossils and stuff, but no skin. Most people draw dinosaurs using a technique called paleo art. It’s not really a good technique. Below are some pics of modern day animals drawn using it. Visit the link to find out which animals they are and to see more pics.
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/natashaumer/dinosaur-animals
-
We do know what dinosaurs looked like, sure maybe not color exactly but we have skin impressions, mummies, skeletal reconstructions and comparative anatomy to guide our understanding of what they looked like.
Example of a well preserved dinosaur is Borealopelta, we know a lot about how it looked like down to color.
The images in this post are an example of “shrink-wrappping” which is a practice used by paleo artists. This technique doesn’t take fat, muscles, or tendons into consideration resulting in the innacurate depictions shown.-
Replying to:
this was not a debate i was expecting to see here today
-
Replying to:
it seems like the middle one (the horned one) takes muscles into consideration
and im sure the guy meant more typical dinosaurs like the tyrannosaurus rex or the pterodactyl
-
Replying to:
The cow shrink-wrappping does have some considerations that still make it recognizable as such, however it is presented lacking fat stores and ears that we know cows had.
And as for Pterosaurs and tyrannosaurus, these are some of the best researched groups that we know of. We know Pterosaurs had a fuzzy coverage of pycnofibers
Spanned the length of the body and we have detailed biomechanical data of how they took off and walked thanks to a combination of math and footprints. Tyrannosaurus have some of the most complete skeletons ever discovered and skin impressions to boot, this has made it possible for the construction of lifelike full-scale replicas like that of the “fleshy” statue made of sue the Tyrannosaurus.What Did SUE The T. Rex Look Like When Alive? New Field Model Shows Dino With Skin, Eyes
-
Replying to:
i thoguth a lawsuiit was happening Lol
-
-
-
-
-
Replying to comment by:
Idk, I’m not that smart
- Load More










no!!!
people would go back to the oldests posts and make updates and it would be chaos
User Banned
Actually just made it that you can edit your post if is not older than 1 hour
For forever edit posts maybe for group admins
its on purpose bro
for reasons stated above
Dude that would be bad, very very bad