@iama
Joined on September 12th, 2020, this user has been a member for 2,106 days and is the 40,292nd person to register an account.
Has 42 submissions, the first one uploaded on February 3rd, 2021 and the most recent on April 29th, 2026.
Of those, 1 has been featured and 4 have won Users' Choice.
On average, each submission earns 3,878 downloads.
In total, they have been download 162,905 times.
Counting every individual stickfigure, including the contents of all packs, this user has technically made and submitted 200 stickfigures.
On average, when this user rates stickfigures, they are 66% positive.
Also, they are typically 100% positive when rating animation spotlights.
Has made 267 comments on non-activity pages of the site. Alternatively, this user has made 4,069 comments on actual activity pages of the site.
They have visited the site consecutively for 808 days, their best streak also being 808 days. On average, they post 11 updates and 18 comments per week.
This member is not a Users' Choice voter.
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Sticknodes spaghetti code.
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No appearance on SOTD

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Yuno Miles before Yuno Miles was a thing 😭😭😭
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Deathproof.
Why? Because well, it’s got Kurt Russel, a 71 Chevy Nova, and lots of fun, gory kills.
It’s one of the few movies i can watch again and again and again without getting bored (Including Tombstone)
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Wife.
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Made a little something for Grave/Digger since i am quite fond of it:
Talon “Cavalry” Revolver
“When soldiers started making their way from the surface to the underground, it’s no suprise most of them had their previously issued sidearms in their person as they descended into the caves, with one of such cases being Captain Joseph J. Walker, an infamous cavalry trooper.Known for his time fighting natives in north america sometime in the 1890’s, early on in his career he carried a pair of the heavy, blackpowder saddle pistols that shared his last name, although he later switched them for a pair of Colt’s Single Action revolvers, fitting one of them with a custom made “wire frame” shoulder stock, using the latter as a somewhat makeshift carbine for a better shot when he was riding on horseback.
As horses quickly perished in the underground due to the cave plague, he was instead asigned to a group of Officer scouts, since he was after all already familiar with skirmisher shock tactics from his time fighting natives.
He quickly found success with his makeshift carbine down under the earth, as he could cock the action faster than any bolt action or semi-auto the Solace had to offer, quickly building up a reputation for himself once again, turning into a legend among the caves.
Ultimately, his demise came in the form of a suprise ambush to a Nation stronghold by the Golden Empire, where he and about a dozen or so of his veteran soldiers stood their ground for as long as they possibly could with what little ammo they had.
When his body has eventually found hours after the assault, Morticians stated his body was almost torn in half by machine gun fire, stating that:
– “It was a grim reminder of how the new always ends up flushing out the old.”
His hat was hung up in a corner of his bed, most likely placing it there knowing he would not live to wear it again, his bloodied hand still clutching the stocked revolver.As to what happened with the sidearms? What we know is that the stocked pistol was taken back to Solace territory, where it was taken apart and reversed engineered to start mass production of the notorious shoulder stocks, able to be privately bought by soldiers of both sides who wanted to employ his same methods of combat.
However, the fate of the other pistol is more ambiguous, with stories saying that it was sent back home to what little family he had remaining, ultimately ending with the revolver being burried with him, still placed in his grasp like it had been for so many years before.”
Artist’s sketch of Captain Joseph “Jack” Walker, the picture was found in his pocket by Morticians when performing a post mortem autopsy, with the picture damaged by a 9x19mm bullet hole, an attempt to salvage the picture was roughly made by ripping off the burnt parts, ultimately ending with the Captain’s face being lost.
-circa 19201876 – 1921
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As a kid, much like you i was always scared of Herobrine, but weirdly enough not because i feared he\’d come through my screen and kill my entire family or something.
But because i feared he would mess up my phone, delete all my apps, and make me lose all my progress in Jetpack Joyride (after all, i poured my heart and soul into that game!)
Although Herobrine never did try and corrupt my phone, like one or two years ago, my PS4 that i had gotten as a Christmas gift like a year earlier was having some issues, so i sent it off to a \”reliable\” console repair guy who had already cleaned it up and replaced the thermal paste when i had just gotten it.
But as it turns out, the bastard sold it off to buy crack before he was sent off to an asylum to cleanse him of the adiction, so i was forced to buy a NEW PS4.
Even if i did keep all my previous games thanks to my PS4 account, all the progress was wiped clean, including both my MULTIPLE months long RDR2 and Ghost Of Tsushima playthroughs (rip).
Anyways, i think i went a bit off topic at the end. -
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If i had to pinpoint the EXACT moment of the downfall, i\’d say The Magnificent Seven (2017) was the last big budget western ever made.
Sure, we\’ve gotten good shows recently such as American Primeval, or Horizon, but other than that? Nothing, nowadays you only see low-budget passion project westerns.
Not saying they\’re bad, far from it. But all im saying is, we\’re not getting Unforgiven any time soon. -
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No you may not, im the only one who talks about westerns here, sit down.
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