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Stick figure

A stick figure, or stick man, is a very simple drawing of a person composed of a few lines and a circle. Often drawn by children, stick figures are known for their simplistic style. The head is most often represented by a circle, which can be a solid color or embellished with details such as eyes, a mouth, or hair. The arms, legs, torso, and abdomen are usually represented with straight lines. Details such as hands, feet, and a neck may be present or absent; simpler stick figures often display an ambiguous emotional expression or disproportionate limbs.[1]

Basic “stick figure” representation of a person, with a circle for the head and lines for the torso, arms, and legs.

The stick figure is a universally recognizable symbol, in all likelihood one of the most well-known in the world. It transcends language, location, demographics, and can trace back to its roots for almost 30,000 years. Its simplicity and versatility led to the stick figure being used for a variety of purposes: infographics, signage, comics, animations, games, film storyboards, and many kinds of visual media all employ the stick figure. With the advent of the World Wide Web, the stick figure became a central element within an entire genre of web-based interactive entertainment known as Flash animation. Over a period of more than two decades, stick figure animation impacted and shaped the visual landscape of the internet.[citation needed]

History edit

 
Aboriginal rock painting of Mimi spirits in the Anbangbang gallery at Nourlangie Rock
 
In Mandaean manuscripts, uthras (celestial beings) are illustrated using stick figures, such as in these illustrations from the Scroll of Abatur.

The stick figure's earliest roots are in prehistoric art. Some of the most revealing and informative markers of early human life are cave paintings and petroglyphs, ancient depictions covering a variety of subjects left behind on stone walls. Visual representations of people, animals, and depictions of daily life can be found displayed across the walls of numerous habitation sites all over the world, such as depictions of mimi's in Australia or the Indalo in Spain.

Tens of thousands of years later, writing systems that use images for words or morphemes instead of letters—so-called logographies, such as Egyptian and Chinese—started simplifying people and other objects to be used as linguistic symbols.

In Mandaean manuscripts, uthras (celestial beings) are illustrated using stick figures.[2]

In the early 1920s, Austrian sociologist Otto Neurath developed an interest in the concept of universal language. He quickly established the idea that, while words and phrases could always be misunderstood, pictures had a certain unifying quality that made them a perfect fit for his project. In 1925, Neurath began work on what would become the international system of typographic picture education, or isotype, a system of conveying warnings, statistics, and general information through standardized and easily understandable pictographs. Neurath made significant use of the versatile stick figure design to represent individuals and statistics in a variety of ways. Graphic designer Rudolf Modley founded Pictorial Statistics Inc. in 1934 and brought the isotype system to the United States in 1972.

 
Restroom sign with stick figures

The first international use of stick figures dates back to the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. Pictograms created by Japanese designers Masaru Katsumi and Yoshiro Yamashita formed the basis of future pictograms.[3][4] In 1972, Otto "Otl" Aicher developed the round-ended, geometric grid-based stick figures used on the signage, printed materials, and television for the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich.[5][6] Drawing on those and many other similar symbol sets in use at the time, the American Institute of Graphic Arts (AIGA), commissioned by the U.S. Department of Transportation, developed the DOT pictograms: 50 public domain symbols for use at transportation hubs, public spaces, large events, and other contexts in which people speak a wide variety of different languages. The DOT pictograms, or symbols derived from them, are widely used throughout much of the world today.

Internet culture edit

1990s edit

In the early 1990s, internet pioneer and programmer Tom Fulp began to produce 2D stick figure animations on his Amiga computer for entertainment purposes.

1996: SFDT edit

Stick Figure Death Theater, often abbreviated as SFDT, was founded in 1996 by Matt Calvert, initially as a personal website. It mainly featured animation of stick figures and many famous animators such as Terkoiz and Edd Gould premiered their first animations here. The site continued to host the animation until the domain ended in 2013.[7]

1998–2005: increased popularity edit

Tom Fulp started working with Flash soon after the Macromedia acquisition, producing his first game with the software, "Telebubby Fun Land", in 1998.[8] Despite the limited capabilities of the animator, Flash games were unprecedented. The publication of Fulp's 1999 point-and-click Flash game classic "Pico's School" kicked off the exponential growth of the genre's popularity.[9] As a result, Newgrounds soon became a major hub of online activity. In 2000, Fulp introduced a portal system through which users could submit Flash animations and games of their own.[10] Other game and animation aggregator sites such as "Addicting Games" followed soon after, and even older, more niche animation platforms such as "stickdeath.com" and "stick figure death theater" reached wider notoriety.

1999: Stickpage edit

Stickpage, formerly known as 'Stickmen', was founded in 1999 by Jason 'Crazy Jay' Whitham. The site eventually became a central forum for stick figure animators to upload animations and games, and had an opportunity to cash in when it merged with FluidAnims in 2012. The decline of Stickpage happened in parallel with the founding of the Hyun's Dojo website. In 2020, the Stickpage forum closed shortly after Adobe announced the death of the Flash Player on which the site relied. However, the website's main domain is still running.[11]

Xiao Xiao edit

On April 19, 2001, Chinese animator Zhu Zhiqiang uploaded a 75-second-long video titled "Xiao Xiao" on the newly formed Newgrounds animation portal.[12] Accompanied by bit-crushed audio samples, it shows two simple stick figures fighting with their fists and various weapons over a white background. Inspired by over-the-top, Hong-Kong-style martial arts films, Zhiqiang let his figures perform flips, flying kicks, and a number of other exaggerated attacks and defenses. As the fight gets increasingly intense, more tools including a bow and arrow, rocket launchers, and duplication abilities are added to the mix before the battle comes to a violent conclusion. With this simple formula, "Xiao Xiao" quickly became the most popular Flash animation ever created. Spawning countless imitations and "Xiao-Xiao-style" descendants, it turned into the blueprint for an entire subgenre of 2D animation that has garnered hundreds of millions of views since.[when?][needs update][citation needed]

Other notable events (2001–2005) edit

  • January 19, 2001: Animator Rob_D created the popular "Cyanide and Happiness", the first episode of Joe Zombie's debut with more cinematic, although still very rudimentary, stickman animation . The original series lasted three episodes before being rebooted with better graphics in October.[13]
  • November 3, 2002: The first part of the Castle series is released. Animated by Oscar Johansson, this series broke new ground for storytelling in stick figure animation with a dark, complex plot. While the series' iconic properties appear in later volumes, this first volume will remain relevant to the story and its importance as the series' roots remain firmly in place.[14]
  • July 13, 2003: Newgrounds.com user "IGSDann" publishes the Flash game "A true stick death", rapidly increasing the popularity of the genre. Later that year, user "qwerqwer 1234" releases "mudah.swf", a comedic series of fight sequences inspired by the Japanese manga series JoJo's Bizarre Adventure.
  • December 7, 2003: "壁破き", or "Stickman vs Wall", an animation video in which a stick figure uses increasingly elaborate and advanced methods and tools to break down a wall, is released, marking the beginning for an entire sub-genre within the stick animation community.
  • 2004: Armor Games, another major Flash sites, goes online.
  • June 2, 2005: The original "Storm the House" survival flash game is posted for the first time on Addicting Games by user "Ivory Drive".
  • September 2005: The famous webcomic xkcd, which uses stick figures in humorous contexts often relating to science, philosophy, technology and internet culture, debuts.[15]

2005–2016 edit

On December 3, 2005, Adobe Systems Inc. acquired the entirety of Macromedia, once again rebranding Macromedia's now ubiquitous Flash software. Almost a decade earlier, Adobe had turned down an offer to buy FutureSplash in favor of their own Acrobat system. Now, the tables had turned and the corporation was buying flash's new owner for USD 3.4 billion.[16] With this acquisition, the program entered its final and most recognizable stage of development. Adobe spearheaded Flash animation for the next decade and a half, and it was during this period that Flash facilitated some of the most recognizable stick figure animations and games of all time.

Animator vs. Animation edit

Created by animator, YouTuber, and artist Alan Becker, the first episode of "Animator vs. Animation" premiered on newgrounds.com on June 3, 2006. It showed a stick figure fighting to break out of the animation program it was created in. The video has garnered almost 80 million views since its publication.[17] As of December 2023, the series contains six main episodes and a number of spin-offs, among them include the video "Animation vs. Minecraft", which has gained over 305 million views as of March 2022.[18] In total, all of Alan Becker's animation videos were watched over four and a half billion times with the vast majority of them being centered around stick figure animation.[19]

Pivot Animator edit

While Adobe Flash was at every point in time the most popular Flash animation tool, there were other competitors, most notably Pivot Animator (formerly Pivot Stickfigure Animator). Created in 2005 by software developer Peter Bone, the program was specifically geared towards stick figure animation.[20] Unlike Adobe Flash, which had grown into a highly complex 2D animation environment, Pivot Animator, with its simplicity allowed virtually anyone to create stick figure animations without requiring any form of expertise. This brought the ability to create and distribute quality stick animations to a much greater audience than before, and alongside Flash, Pivot Animator soon became another central tool for the countless internet users who were caught up in the trend.

Hyun's Dojo Community edit

Around 2012, popular stick figure animator Hyun created a brand new stick figure community after the shut down of Fluidanims. Hyun's Dojo is a primarily animation community, owned by the titular animator, which hosts collaborations, crossovers, and the popular Dojo duels wherein two animators create animated fights against one another for points known as "Rice".[21] The community consists of a website, an official Twitter, and a YouTube channel. Hyun's Dojo Community's first video was posted on December 30, 2012;[22] followed by "Hyun's Dojo Promo" on March 9, 2013;[23] "The Dojo Collab" on August 23, 2013;[24] and finally, "Hyun's Dojo - Create Together"[25] on August 24, 2013. Around 2015, Hyunsdojo.com was created, followed by a Discord server as a hub for animators and community members to collaborate and communicate with one another. In that time, the community was composed mostly of stick figure animators that popularized the art and animation form. However, the community has expanded past stick figures throughout the years. As of March 2021, the YouTube channel has reached over 2 million subscribers.[26] The community posted a collaboration to celebrate the occasion. The channel slowly continues to grow in influence in the Internet stick figure community.

This is Bob edit

At some point between June 2008 and April 2009, an internet copypasta began to appear featuring a Unicode stick figure named Bob. There was an initial surge in popularity in April 2009, leading to a hostile response from the YouTube community wherein the community would flag the copypasta as spam. This spread of the copypasta would reach its peak in search interest around June 2010 before declining gradually. However, on September 24, 2013, YouTube announced that they would be integrating the YouTube Comments section with Google+.[27] In response, the YouTube community brought back the Bob copypasta in a new form, with Bob "building an army" against Google+.[28] This resulted in the biggest spike in popularity for the copypasta, reaching its peak popularity in November 2013.

Other notable events edit

  • 2004: Castle II, the first stick figure animation series to adopt a cinematic style (with shade and lighting effects for the character), was released. Castle has been considered[by whom?] one of the top stick figure animations of all time, especially for Stickpage. It is widely available on YouTube, with hundred of thousands to millions of views as of March 2022. Castle, with its lighting, intricate detailing on the character's eyes, use of 3D technology, and acclaimed[by whom?] soundtrack by Aleksander Vinter[29] along with subtitles, has been praised [by whom?] for achieving a movie-like experience. A total of 12 feature-length episodes have been released. As of 2009, all episodes up to Castle Repercussions D2 have been released.[needs update][30] An upcoming[when?] Castle IV installment to conclude the story of Castle is on indefinite hiatus as of March 2022, although there is a teaser of it on YouTube.[31]
  • 2006: The first entry in the viral "Stick Figures on Crack" animation series by PivotMasterDX is uploaded to YouTube.[32][33]
  • July 4th, 2006: The first episode of stick figure animation series Tha Cliff by xefpatterson is released. As of 2021, three episodes have been released. Together, they have been watched over 40 million times and inspired countless fan-made imitations.[34]
  • August 26, 2006: "wpnFire", a stick figure action Flash game, is first published on Newgrounds.com.[35] Since its release, it has been played over 2.3 million times.
  • October 10, 2006: Yet another content hosting platform, Kongregate, is launched. It hosts a number of highly popular flash games, among them "Electric Man 2" and the "Shopping Cart Hero" trilogy, which accumulated over 15 million plays.[36]
  • 2007: The first episode of "Shock Series", a high-octane stick figure fighting series featuring over-the-top combat combined with Lolspeak-one liners, is released. Today, reuploads of the series on YouTube have tens of millions of views.[37]
  • March 17, 2008: the first episode of the "Crazy Stick Figure Randomness!!" series premieres on YouTube.[38]
  • December 24, 2008: Flipnote, another competitor to Adobe Flash and Pivot, is released. While not as popular as the aforementioned two,[citation needed] Flipnote does serve a role in the productions of stick figure media until the software's termination in 2018.[citation needed]
  • June 2009: Jason Whitham, the founder of stickpage.com, releases a large-scale stick figure combat simulator titled "Stick War".[39]
  • In the same month, YouTuber and animator "TheAssassin650" publishes the first installment of his influential "Blue vs Green" animation series.[40]
  • November 18, 2010: The first episode of Dick Figures, an adult animated web series created by Ed Skudder and Zack Keller, is published on YouTube by Mondo Media. The series finished with over 50 episodes and 250 million views.[41]
  • October 14, 2016: WEAPON MASTER, made by YeonAnims (previously known as Unseen),was released. It was highly praised due to the nonstop, fast-paced combat, as well as for having a variety of references to both other animators and video games that were popular at the time. It has amassed over 21 million views in the Hyun's Dojo Community YouTube channel
  • April 21, 2021: Red Vs Black 2021 was released, made by GhostMM (Also known as MicroMist). Packed with not only fast-paced action and humor, Red Vs Black 2021 showcased the hidden talent lying within the Hyun's Dojo community, showcasing the high-fidelity content that could be produced from the animators within the community. The video has amassed over one million views on the Hyun's Dojo community channel, and the animator has went on to create two more sequels following the years 2022 and 2023, the ladder gaining over one million views as well during the beginning months of 2024.
  • July 23, 2021: Popular stick figure animator and Hyun's Dojo member Gildedguy received a cosmetic outfit for Epic GamesFortnite: Battle Royale as a promotion for the "Shortnite" film festival.[42]

2017–2021: The end of Flash edit

In July 2017, Adobe Systems, which had continued to support and develop both Flash Animator and Flash Player for the past 12 years, announced that they would officially end support for the program by the end of the decade.[43] This decision had far-reaching consequences as it entailed not only the end of development on the software but also the official end of sites that still supported Flash and the deactivation of virtually every instance of Flash player via a built-in kill switch.[44] A number of safety issues and more versatile alternatives like HTML5 had rendered Flash obsolete.[45] Flash advocates and fans called for preservation efforts to ensure not all games, animations and other types of Flash media would be lost forever.

Preservation efforts edit

Following Adobe's announcement of their intentions to retire Flash, the community began efforts to preserve the genre's history. In January 2018, a YouTuber named Ben Latimore, going by the online handle "BlueMaxima", started up a community project called the Flashpoint Archive. The aim of the project was to document, categorize, and most importantly preserve two decades of Flash history, culture, and community. Flashpoint grew to serve as a massive archive, a library for the most influential and renowned Flash animations and games in internet history, for anyone to view and experience.[46] The project started slowly, but once word began to spread about the initiative, the development team began to grow and the library began to expand exponentially. Xiao Xiao, Shock Series, WPNFire, Storm the House, and countless other stick figure games and animations were saved and archived over the coming months and years.

Despite the impending demise of Flash, its final years saw the release of some of the most popular and most polished stick figure animations and games of all time. Notable examples include Collection of Henry Stickmin (August 7, 2020) and the half-hour long "Animator vs. Animation V" (December 5, 2020). Finally, on January 12, 2021, all instances of Flash player ceased operation, all Flash media refused to play, and Adobe Flash was officially retired.[47] Due to the conservation efforts of Flashpoint, and because of big hosting platforms like Newgrounds and Kongregate developing their own workarounds, the Flash community, and, with it, the stick figure animation subgenre, were preserved from extinction. Creators from that point onward found alternatives for the now defunct software, such as Pivot and Flash's official successor, Adobe Animate.

2022: Community heritage edit

On March 13, 2022, animator Sopple along with Hyun's Dojo Community created a website to archive the heritage of the queer community. This timeline is intended to provide a concise and accessible resource for maintaining the community's heritage.[48]

Doors: The Game edit

Doors is a 2D platformer game based on the animated series of the same name. Launched to crowdfund and launched on July 28, 2022. For over 10 years, Doors has been a collaborative effort with a record number of artists coming together, each designing and creating animations. Photos for your own room are linked together to form one long adventure. The goal is to combine the nostalgia of stickman animations and old flash games with the polish and feel of current level and platforming editors.[49]

2023: Shomen was born edit

SHOMEN, created by Sopple. Japanese is 正面 (Shōmen – meaning in front of something, often used for buildings and for ceremonies in dojos) or 書面 (Shomen – meaning “to write”). The SHOMEN website provides information and connects freelancers, stickmen, web-gen animators and artists with each other about what's going on in the community. The purpose of this news site is to represent the origins of the swf era while they explore the present.[50] Visit Shomen.art

Unicode edit

 
Four of the Unicode stick figures, leaning right is omitted.

As of Unicode version 13.0, there are five stick figure characters in the Symbols for Legacy Computing block. These are in the codepoints U+1FBC5 to U+1FBC9.[51]

OpenMoji supports the five characters along with joining character sequences to give the other figures a dress.[52] For example, the sequence U+1FBC6 🯆 STICK FIGURE WITH ARMS RAISED, U+200D ZERO WIDTH JOINER, U+1F457 👗 DRESS (🯆‍👗).

Unicode stick figure characters
Codepoint Name Character Notes
U+1FBC5 STICK FIGURE 🯅 Not to be mistaken with U+1F6B9 🚹 MENS SYMBOL[51]
U+1FBC6 STICK FIGURE WITH ARMS RAISED 🯆
U+1FBC7 STICK FIGURE LEANING LEFT 🯇 Mirror images of each other.
U+1FBC8 STICK FIGURE LEANING RIGHT 🯈
U+1FBC9 STICK FIGURE WITH DRESS 🯉 Not to be mistaken with U+1F6BA 🚺 WOMENS SYMBOL[51]

See also edit

 
The mysterious sequence.

References edit

  1. ^ "Definition of stick figure | Dictionary.com". www.dictionary.com. Retrieved 2021-11-27.
  2. ^ Nasoraia, Brikha H.S. (2021). The Mandaean gnostic religion: worship practice and deep thought. New Delhi: Sterling. ISBN 978-81-950824-1-4. OCLC 1272858968.
  3. ^ "Yoshiro Yamashita". luc.devroye.org. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  4. ^ "Visual Design". Official Report of the 1972 Olympic Games, volume 1. Munich: Pro Sport. 1974. p. 272. OCLC 1076250303. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
  5. ^ "Otl Aicher pictograms and the 1972 Olympic Games". Otl Aicher pictograms. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
  6. ^ "Otl Aicher". Architectuul. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
  7. ^ . 1998-12-12. Archived from the original on 1998-12-12. Retrieved 2024-01-06.
  8. ^ "Newgrounds Presents: Teletubby Fun Land". www.newgrounds.com. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  9. ^ Salter, Anastasia (2014). Flash : building the interactive web. John Murray. Cambridge, Massachusetts. ISBN 978-0-262-32577-6. OCLC 890375115.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  10. ^ . 2021-03-31. Archived from the original on 2021-03-31. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  11. ^ "Stick Page - Best Online Stick Figure Movies and Stick Games, with flash games, movies, all free Xiao Xiao style". stickpage.com. Retrieved 2024-01-06.
  12. ^ "Xiao Xiao". Newgrounds.com. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  13. ^ "Joe Zombie :: Episode 1". Newgrounds.com. Retrieved 2024-01-06.
  14. ^ Castle I (4k), retrieved 2024-01-06
  15. ^ Chivers, Tom (November 6, 2009). "The 10 best webcomics, from Achewood to XKCD". The Telegraph. from the original on November 19, 2015. Retrieved March 29, 2022.
  16. ^ Flynn, Laurie J. (2005-04-19). "Adobe Buys Macromedia for $3.4 Billion". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  17. ^ Animator vs. Animation (original), retrieved 2021-11-23
  18. ^ Animation vs. Minecraft (original), retrieved 2021-11-23
  19. ^ "Alan Becker - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  20. ^ "Pivot Animator". pivotanimator.net. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  21. ^ "Welcome to Dojo Duels! (START HERE!)". Hyun's Dojo. Retrieved 2021-11-29.
  22. ^ Entanglement 3 Entry by Jombo, retrieved 2021-11-29
  23. ^ Hyun's Dojo Promo, retrieved 2021-11-29
  24. ^ The Dojo Collab, retrieved 2021-11-29
  25. ^ Hyun's Dojo - Create Together, retrieved 2021-11-29
  26. ^ 2 MILLION, retrieved 2021-11-29
  27. ^ "We hear you: Better commenting coming to YouTube". blog.youtube. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  28. ^ "YouTube commenters bring in text art tanks to fight Google+ integration". Washington Post. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  29. ^ Castle Repercussions Original Soundtrack by Aleksander Vinter), retrieved 2022-03-24
  30. ^ Castle I, II, III, Repercussions (by Oscar Johansson known as Get-lost), retrieved 2022-03-24
  31. ^ Castle IV (by Oscar Johansson), retrieved 2022-03-24
  32. ^ Stick Figures on Crack 1 on YouTube, retrieved 2023-12-29
  33. ^ , archived from the original on 2007-11-28, retrieved 2023-12-29
  34. ^ Tha Cliff 1, retrieved 2021-11-23
  35. ^ "wpnFire". Newgrounds.com. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  36. ^ "Shopping Cart Hero". Kongregate. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  37. ^ Shock 1, 2, 3 (by Terkoiz), retrieved 2021-11-23
  38. ^ Crazy Stickfigure Randomness!!, retrieved 2021-11-29
  39. ^ "Stick War Game on Stickpage.com". www.stickpage.com. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  40. ^ BLUE V.S GREEN, retrieved 2021-11-23
  41. ^ Dick Figures - A Bee or Something (Ep #1), retrieved 2021-11-29
  42. ^ "Watch Short Nite 2 in Fortnite's Party Royale!". Epic Games' Fortnite. Retrieved 2021-11-29.
  43. ^ Warren, Tom (2017-07-25). "Adobe will finally kill Flash in 2020". The Verge. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  44. ^ "Adobe releases final Flash Player update, warns of 2021 kill switch". BleepingComputer. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  45. ^ "Adobe Flash Player End of Life". www.adobe.com. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  46. ^ "Frequently Asked Questions - BlueMaxima's Flashpoint". bluemaxima.org. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  47. ^ Hughes, Owen (January 12, 2021). "Adobe Flash: It's finally over, so uninstall Flash Player now". TechRepublic. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  48. ^ "Stick figure timeline". SOPPLE. Retrieved 2024-01-06.
  49. ^ Doors Game - Kickstarter Launch Trailer, retrieved 2024-01-06
  50. ^ "Welcome to SHOMEN". shomen.art. Retrieved 2024-01-06.
  51. ^ a b c "Symbols for Legacy Computing" (PDF). The Unicode Standard, Version 13.0. Unicode, Inc. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  52. ^ "OpenMoji · Library". openmoji.org. Retrieved January 26, 2021.

External links edit

  • Gerd Arntz and the Woodcut Origins of the Stick Figure
  • The 50 AIGA symbols

stick, figure, this, article, about, graphic, american, reggae, group, stick, figure, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, remove. This article is about the graphic For the American reggae group see Stick Figure This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Stick figure news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2014 Learn how and when to remove this message A stick figure or stick man is a very simple drawing of a person composed of a few lines and a circle Often drawn by children stick figures are known for their simplistic style The head is most often represented by a circle which can be a solid color or embellished with details such as eyes a mouth or hair The arms legs torso and abdomen are usually represented with straight lines Details such as hands feet and a neck may be present or absent simpler stick figures often display an ambiguous emotional expression or disproportionate limbs 1 Basic stick figure representation of a person with a circle for the head and lines for the torso arms and legs The stick figure is a universally recognizable symbol in all likelihood one of the most well known in the world It transcends language location demographics and can trace back to its roots for almost 30 000 years Its simplicity and versatility led to the stick figure being used for a variety of purposes infographics signage comics animations games film storyboards and many kinds of visual media all employ the stick figure With the advent of the World Wide Web the stick figure became a central element within an entire genre of web based interactive entertainment known as Flash animation Over a period of more than two decades stick figure animation impacted and shaped the visual landscape of the internet citation needed Contents 1 History 2 Internet culture 2 1 1990s 2 2 1996 SFDT 2 3 1998 2005 increased popularity 2 4 1999 Stickpage 2 4 1 Xiao Xiao 2 4 2 Other notable events 2001 2005 2 5 2005 2016 2 5 1 Animator vs Animation 2 5 2 Pivot Animator 2 5 3 Hyun s Dojo Community 2 5 4 This is Bob 2 5 5 Other notable events 2 6 2017 2021 The end of Flash 2 6 1 Preservation efforts 2 7 2022 Community heritage 2 8 Doors The Game 2 9 2023 Shomen was born 3 Unicode 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory edit nbsp Aboriginal rock painting of Mimi spirits in the Anbangbang gallery at Nourlangie Rock nbsp In Mandaean manuscripts uthras celestial beings are illustrated using stick figures such as in these illustrations from the Scroll of Abatur The stick figure s earliest roots are in prehistoric art Some of the most revealing and informative markers of early human life are cave paintings and petroglyphs ancient depictions covering a variety of subjects left behind on stone walls Visual representations of people animals and depictions of daily life can be found displayed across the walls of numerous habitation sites all over the world such as depictions of mimi s in Australia or the Indalo in Spain Tens of thousands of years later writing systems that use images for words or morphemes instead of letters so called logographies such as Egyptian and Chinese started simplifying people and other objects to be used as linguistic symbols In Mandaean manuscripts uthras celestial beings are illustrated using stick figures 2 In the early 1920s Austrian sociologist Otto Neurath developed an interest in the concept of universal language He quickly established the idea that while words and phrases could always be misunderstood pictures had a certain unifying quality that made them a perfect fit for his project In 1925 Neurath began work on what would become the international system of typographic picture education or isotype a system of conveying warnings statistics and general information through standardized and easily understandable pictographs Neurath made significant use of the versatile stick figure design to represent individuals and statistics in a variety of ways Graphic designer Rudolf Modley founded Pictorial Statistics Inc in 1934 and brought the isotype system to the United States in 1972 nbsp Restroom sign with stick figures The first international use of stick figures dates back to the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo Pictograms created by Japanese designers Masaru Katsumi and Yoshiro Yamashita formed the basis of future pictograms 3 4 In 1972 Otto Otl Aicher developed the round ended geometric grid based stick figures used on the signage printed materials and television for the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich 5 6 Drawing on those and many other similar symbol sets in use at the time the American Institute of Graphic Arts AIGA commissioned by the U S Department of Transportation developed the DOT pictograms 50 public domain symbols for use at transportation hubs public spaces large events and other contexts in which people speak a wide variety of different languages The DOT pictograms or symbols derived from them are widely used throughout much of the world today nbsp A stick figure at the prehistoric Leo Petroglyph in the United States nbsp The AIGA symbol for the drinking fountain nbsp A stick figure sign for cycling by Otl Aicher at the 1972 Munich Olympics source source source source source source track A video displaying the drawing of a stick man stick woman and a stick dog respectively nbsp Flag of Mali Federation 1959 1961 nbsp Stick figure in the internet communityInternet culture editThis Internet culture s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message 1990s edit In the early 1990s internet pioneer and programmer Tom Fulp began to produce 2D stick figure animations on his Amiga computer for entertainment purposes 1996 SFDT edit Stick Figure Death Theater often abbreviated as SFDT was founded in 1996 by Matt Calvert initially as a personal website It mainly featured animation of stick figures and many famous animators such as Terkoiz and Edd Gould premiered their first animations here The site continued to host the animation until the domain ended in 2013 7 1998 2005 increased popularity edit Tom Fulp started working with Flash soon after the Macromedia acquisition producing his first game with the software Telebubby Fun Land in 1998 8 Despite the limited capabilities of the animator Flash games were unprecedented The publication of Fulp s 1999 point and click Flash game classic Pico s School kicked off the exponential growth of the genre s popularity 9 As a result Newgrounds soon became a major hub of online activity In 2000 Fulp introduced a portal system through which users could submit Flash animations and games of their own 10 Other game and animation aggregator sites such as Addicting Games followed soon after and even older more niche animation platforms such as stickdeath com and stick figure death theater reached wider notoriety 1999 Stickpage edit Stickpage formerly known as Stickmen was founded in 1999 by Jason Crazy Jay Whitham The site eventually became a central forum for stick figure animators to upload animations and games and had an opportunity to cash in when it merged with FluidAnims in 2012 The decline of Stickpage happened in parallel with the founding of the Hyun s Dojo website In 2020 the Stickpage forum closed shortly after Adobe announced the death of the Flash Player on which the site relied However the website s main domain is still running 11 Xiao Xiao edit On April 19 2001 Chinese animator Zhu Zhiqiang uploaded a 75 second long video titled Xiao Xiao on the newly formed Newgrounds animation portal 12 Accompanied by bit crushed audio samples it shows two simple stick figures fighting with their fists and various weapons over a white background Inspired by over the top Hong Kong style martial arts films Zhiqiang let his figures perform flips flying kicks and a number of other exaggerated attacks and defenses As the fight gets increasingly intense more tools including a bow and arrow rocket launchers and duplication abilities are added to the mix before the battle comes to a violent conclusion With this simple formula Xiao Xiao quickly became the most popular Flash animation ever created Spawning countless imitations and Xiao Xiao style descendants it turned into the blueprint for an entire subgenre of 2D animation that has garnered hundreds of millions of views since when needs update citation needed Other notable events 2001 2005 edit January 19 2001 Animator Rob D created the popular Cyanide and Happiness the first episode of Joe Zombie s debut with more cinematic although still very rudimentary stickman animation The original series lasted three episodes before being rebooted with better graphics in October 13 November 3 2002 The first part of the Castle series is released Animated by Oscar Johansson this series broke new ground for storytelling in stick figure animation with a dark complex plot While the series iconic properties appear in later volumes this first volume will remain relevant to the story and its importance as the series roots remain firmly in place 14 July 13 2003 Newgrounds com user IGSDann publishes the Flash game A true stick death rapidly increasing the popularity of the genre Later that year user qwerqwer 1234 releases mudah swf a comedic series of fight sequences inspired by the Japanese manga series JoJo s Bizarre Adventure December 7 2003 壁破き or Stickman vs Wall an animation video in which a stick figure uses increasingly elaborate and advanced methods and tools to break down a wall is released marking the beginning for an entire sub genre within the stick animation community 2004 Armor Games another major Flash sites goes online June 2 2005 The original Storm the House survival flash game is posted for the first time on Addicting Games by user Ivory Drive September 2005 The famous webcomic xkcd which uses stick figures in humorous contexts often relating to science philosophy technology and internet culture debuts 15 2005 2016 edit On December 3 2005 Adobe Systems Inc acquired the entirety of Macromedia once again rebranding Macromedia s now ubiquitous Flash software Almost a decade earlier Adobe had turned down an offer to buy FutureSplash in favor of their own Acrobat system Now the tables had turned and the corporation was buying flash s new owner for USD 3 4 billion 16 With this acquisition the program entered its final and most recognizable stage of development Adobe spearheaded Flash animation for the next decade and a half and it was during this period that Flash facilitated some of the most recognizable stick figure animations and games of all time Animator vs Animation edit Created by animator YouTuber and artist Alan Becker the first episode of Animator vs Animation premiered on newgrounds com on June 3 2006 It showed a stick figure fighting to break out of the animation program it was created in The video has garnered almost 80 million views since its publication 17 As of December 2023 the series contains six main episodes and a number of spin offs among them include the video Animation vs Minecraft which has gained over 305 million views as of March 2022 18 In total all of Alan Becker s animation videos were watched over four and a half billion times with the vast majority of them being centered around stick figure animation 19 Pivot Animator edit While Adobe Flash was at every point in time the most popular Flash animation tool there were other competitors most notably Pivot Animator formerly Pivot Stickfigure Animator Created in 2005 by software developer Peter Bone the program was specifically geared towards stick figure animation 20 Unlike Adobe Flash which had grown into a highly complex 2D animation environment Pivot Animator with its simplicity allowed virtually anyone to create stick figure animations without requiring any form of expertise This brought the ability to create and distribute quality stick animations to a much greater audience than before and alongside Flash Pivot Animator soon became another central tool for the countless internet users who were caught up in the trend Hyun s Dojo Community edit Around 2012 popular stick figure animator Hyun created a brand new stick figure community after the shut down of Fluidanims Hyun s Dojo is a primarily animation community owned by the titular animator which hosts collaborations crossovers and the popular Dojo duels wherein two animators create animated fights against one another for points known as Rice 21 The community consists of a website an official Twitter and a YouTube channel Hyun s Dojo Community s first video was posted on December 30 2012 22 followed by Hyun s Dojo Promo on March 9 2013 23 The Dojo Collab on August 23 2013 24 and finally Hyun s Dojo Create Together 25 on August 24 2013 Around 2015 Hyunsdojo com was created followed by a Discord server as a hub for animators and community members to collaborate and communicate with one another In that time the community was composed mostly of stick figure animators that popularized the art and animation form However the community has expanded past stick figures throughout the years As of March 2021 the YouTube channel has reached over 2 million subscribers 26 The community posted a collaboration to celebrate the occasion The channel slowly continues to grow in influence in the Internet stick figure community This is Bob edit At some point between June 2008 and April 2009 an internet copypasta began to appear featuring a Unicode stick figure named Bob There was an initial surge in popularity in April 2009 leading to a hostile response from the YouTube community wherein the community would flag the copypasta as spam This spread of the copypasta would reach its peak in search interest around June 2010 before declining gradually However on September 24 2013 YouTube announced that they would be integrating the YouTube Comments section with Google 27 In response the YouTube community brought back the Bob copypasta in a new form with Bob building an army against Google 28 This resulted in the biggest spike in popularity for the copypasta reaching its peak popularity in November 2013 Other notable events edit 2004 Castle II the first stick figure animation series to adopt a cinematic style with shade and lighting effects for the character was released Castle has been considered by whom one of the top stick figure animations of all time especially for Stickpage It is widely available on YouTube with hundred of thousands to millions of views as of March 2022 update Castle with its lighting intricate detailing on the character s eyes use of 3D technology and acclaimed by whom soundtrack by Aleksander Vinter 29 along with subtitles has been praised by whom for achieving a movie like experience A total of 12 feature length episodes have been released As of 2009 all episodes up to Castle Repercussions D2 have been released needs update 30 An upcoming when Castle IV installment to conclude the story of Castle is on indefinite hiatus as of March 2022 although there is a teaser of it on YouTube 31 2006 The first entry in the viral Stick Figures on Crack animation series by PivotMasterDX is uploaded to YouTube 32 33 July 4th 2006 The first episode of stick figure animation series Tha Cliff by xefpatterson is released As of 2021 three episodes have been released Together they have been watched over 40 million times and inspired countless fan made imitations 34 August 26 2006 wpnFire a stick figure action Flash game is first published on Newgrounds com 35 Since its release it has been played over 2 3 million times October 10 2006 Yet another content hosting platform Kongregate is launched It hosts a number of highly popular flash games among them Electric Man 2 and the Shopping Cart Hero trilogy which accumulated over 15 million plays 36 2007 The first episode of Shock Series a high octane stick figure fighting series featuring over the top combat combined with Lolspeak one liners is released Today reuploads of the series on YouTube have tens of millions of views 37 March 17 2008 the first episode of the Crazy Stick Figure Randomness series premieres on YouTube 38 December 24 2008 Flipnote another competitor to Adobe Flash and Pivot is released While not as popular as the aforementioned two citation needed Flipnote does serve a role in the productions of stick figure media until the software s termination in 2018 citation needed June 2009 Jason Whitham the founder of stickpage com releases a large scale stick figure combat simulator titled Stick War 39 In the same month YouTuber and animator TheAssassin650 publishes the first installment of his influential Blue vs Green animation series 40 November 18 2010 The first episode of Dick Figures an adult animated web series created by Ed Skudder and Zack Keller is published on YouTube by Mondo Media The series finished with over 50 episodes and 250 million views 41 October 14 2016 WEAPON MASTER made by YeonAnims previously known as Unseen was released It was highly praised due to the nonstop fast paced combat as well as for having a variety of references to both other animators and video games that were popular at the time It has amassed over 21 million views in the Hyun s Dojo Community YouTube channel April 21 2021 Red Vs Black 2021 was released made by GhostMM Also known as MicroMist Packed with not only fast paced action and humor Red Vs Black 2021 showcased the hidden talent lying within the Hyun s Dojo community showcasing the high fidelity content that could be produced from the animators within the community The video has amassed over one million views on the Hyun s Dojo community channel and the animator has went on to create two more sequels following the years 2022 and 2023 the ladder gaining over one million views as well during the beginning months of 2024 July 23 2021 Popular stick figure animator and Hyun s Dojo member Gildedguy received a cosmetic outfit for Epic Games Fortnite Battle Royale as a promotion for the Shortnite film festival 42 2017 2021 The end of Flash edit In July 2017 Adobe Systems which had continued to support and develop both Flash Animator and Flash Player for the past 12 years announced that they would officially end support for the program by the end of the decade 43 This decision had far reaching consequences as it entailed not only the end of development on the software but also the official end of sites that still supported Flash and the deactivation of virtually every instance of Flash player via a built in kill switch 44 A number of safety issues and more versatile alternatives like HTML5 had rendered Flash obsolete 45 Flash advocates and fans called for preservation efforts to ensure not all games animations and other types of Flash media would be lost forever Preservation efforts edit Following Adobe s announcement of their intentions to retire Flash the community began efforts to preserve the genre s history In January 2018 a YouTuber named Ben Latimore going by the online handle BlueMaxima started up a community project called the Flashpoint Archive The aim of the project was to document categorize and most importantly preserve two decades of Flash history culture and community Flashpoint grew to serve as a massive archive a library for the most influential and renowned Flash animations and games in internet history for anyone to view and experience 46 The project started slowly but once word began to spread about the initiative the development team began to grow and the library began to expand exponentially Xiao Xiao Shock Series WPNFire Storm the House and countless other stick figure games and animations were saved and archived over the coming months and years Despite the impending demise of Flash its final years saw the release of some of the most popular and most polished stick figure animations and games of all time Notable examples include Collection of Henry Stickmin August 7 2020 and the half hour long Animator vs Animation V December 5 2020 Finally on January 12 2021 all instances of Flash player ceased operation all Flash media refused to play and Adobe Flash was officially retired 47 Due to the conservation efforts of Flashpoint and because of big hosting platforms like Newgrounds and Kongregate developing their own workarounds the Flash community and with it the stick figure animation subgenre were preserved from extinction Creators from that point onward found alternatives for the now defunct software such as Pivot and Flash s official successor Adobe Animate 2022 Community heritage edit On March 13 2022 animator Sopple along with Hyun s Dojo Community created a website to archive the heritage of the queer community This timeline is intended to provide a concise and accessible resource for maintaining the community s heritage 48 Doors The Game edit Doors is a 2D platformer game based on the animated series of the same name Launched to crowdfund and launched on July 28 2022 For over 10 years Doors has been a collaborative effort with a record number of artists coming together each designing and creating animations Photos for your own room are linked together to form one long adventure The goal is to combine the nostalgia of stickman animations and old flash games with the polish and feel of current level and platforming editors 49 2023 Shomen was born edit SHOMEN created by Sopple Japanese is 正面 Shōmen meaning in front of something often used for buildings and for ceremonies in dojos or 書面 Shomen meaning to write The SHOMEN website provides information and connects freelancers stickmen web gen animators and artists with each other about what s going on in the community The purpose of this news site is to represent the origins of the swf era while they explore the present 50 Visit Shomen artUnicode edit nbsp You may need rendering support to display the uncommon Unicode characters in this table correctly nbsp Four of the Unicode stick figures leaning right is omitted As of Unicode version 13 0 there are five stick figure characters in the Symbols for Legacy Computing block These are in the codepoints U 1FBC5 to U 1FBC9 51 OpenMoji supports the five characters along with joining character sequences to give the other figures a dress 52 For example the sequence U 1FBC6 STICK FIGURE WITH ARMS RAISED U 200D ZERO WIDTH JOINER U 1F457 DRESS Unicode stick figure characters Codepoint Name Character Notes U 1FBC5 STICK FIGURE Not to be mistaken with U 1F6B9 MENS SYMBOL 51 U 1FBC6 STICK FIGURE WITH ARMS RAISED U 1FBC7 STICK FIGURE LEANING LEFT Mirror images of each other U 1FBC8 STICK FIGURE LEANING RIGHT U 1FBC9 STICK FIGURE WITH DRESS Not to be mistaken with U 1F6BA WOMENS SYMBOL 51 See also edit nbsp The mysterious sequence 1903 In Arthur Conan Doyle s story The Adventure of the Dancing Men Sherlock Holmes solves the puzzle of a mysterious sequence of stick figures 1908 Emile Cohl s pioneer animated film Fantasmagorie features a stick figure as its main character Tidyman Keep Britain Tidy Tadpole personReferences edit Definition of stick figure Dictionary com www dictionary com Retrieved 2021 11 27 Nasoraia Brikha H S 2021 The Mandaean gnostic religion worship practice and deep thought New Delhi Sterling ISBN 978 81 950824 1 4 OCLC 1272858968 Yoshiro Yamashita luc devroye org Retrieved 2021 11 23 Visual Design Official Report of the 1972 Olympic Games volume 1 Munich Pro Sport 1974 p 272 OCLC 1076250303 Retrieved June 21 2020 Otl Aicher pictograms and the 1972 Olympic Games Otl Aicher pictograms Retrieved June 21 2020 Otl Aicher Architectuul Retrieved June 21 2020 Stick Figure Death Theatre 1998 12 12 Archived from the original on 1998 12 12 Retrieved 2024 01 06 Newgrounds Presents Teletubby Fun Land www newgrounds com Retrieved 2021 11 23 Salter Anastasia 2014 Flash building the interactive web John Murray Cambridge Massachusetts ISBN 978 0 262 32577 6 OCLC 890375115 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Newgrounds Wiki History 2021 03 31 Archived from the original on 2021 03 31 Retrieved 2021 11 23 Stick Page Best Online Stick Figure Movies and Stick Games with flash games movies all free Xiao Xiao style stickpage com Retrieved 2024 01 06 Xiao Xiao Newgrounds com Retrieved 2021 11 23 Joe Zombie Episode 1 Newgrounds com Retrieved 2024 01 06 Castle I 4k retrieved 2024 01 06 Chivers Tom November 6 2009 The 10 best webcomics from Achewood to XKCD The Telegraph Archived from the original on November 19 2015 Retrieved March 29 2022 Flynn Laurie J 2005 04 19 Adobe Buys Macromedia for 3 4 Billion The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2021 11 23 Animator vs Animation original retrieved 2021 11 23 Animation vs Minecraft original retrieved 2021 11 23 Alan Becker YouTube www youtube com Retrieved 2021 11 23 Pivot Animator pivotanimator net Retrieved 2021 11 23 Welcome to Dojo Duels START HERE Hyun s Dojo Retrieved 2021 11 29 Entanglement 3 Entry by Jombo retrieved 2021 11 29 Hyun s Dojo Promo retrieved 2021 11 29 The Dojo Collab retrieved 2021 11 29 Hyun s Dojo Create Together retrieved 2021 11 29 2 MILLION retrieved 2021 11 29 We hear you Better commenting coming to YouTube blog youtube Retrieved 29 November 2021 YouTube commenters bring in text art tanks to fight Google integration Washington Post Retrieved 29 November 2021 Castle Repercussions Original Soundtrack by Aleksander Vinter retrieved 2022 03 24 Castle I II III Repercussions by Oscar Johansson known as Get lost retrieved 2022 03 24 Castle IV by Oscar Johansson retrieved 2022 03 24 Stick Figures on Crack 1 on YouTube retrieved 2023 12 29 PivotMasterDX on Wayback Machine archived from the original on 2007 11 28 retrieved 2023 12 29 Tha Cliff 1 retrieved 2021 11 23 wpnFire Newgrounds com Retrieved 2021 11 23 Shopping Cart Hero Kongregate Retrieved 2021 11 23 Shock 1 2 3 by Terkoiz retrieved 2021 11 23 Crazy Stickfigure Randomness retrieved 2021 11 29 Stick War Game on Stickpage com www stickpage com Retrieved 2021 11 23 BLUE V S GREEN retrieved 2021 11 23 Dick Figures A Bee or Something Ep 1 retrieved 2021 11 29 Watch Short Nite 2 in Fortnite s Party Royale Epic Games Fortnite Retrieved 2021 11 29 Warren Tom 2017 07 25 Adobe will finally kill Flash in 2020 The Verge Retrieved 2021 11 23 Adobe releases final Flash Player update warns of 2021 kill switch BleepingComputer Retrieved 2021 11 23 Adobe Flash Player End of Life www adobe com Retrieved 2021 11 23 Frequently Asked Questions BlueMaxima s Flashpoint bluemaxima org Retrieved 2021 11 23 Hughes Owen January 12 2021 Adobe Flash It s finally over so uninstall Flash Player now TechRepublic Retrieved 2021 11 23 Stick figure timeline SOPPLE Retrieved 2024 01 06 Doors Game Kickstarter Launch Trailer retrieved 2024 01 06 Welcome to SHOMEN shomen art Retrieved 2024 01 06 a b c Symbols for Legacy Computing PDF The Unicode Standard Version 13 0 Unicode Inc Retrieved 8 June 2021 OpenMoji Library openmoji org Retrieved January 26 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stick figures Gerd Arntz and the Woodcut Origins of the Stick Figure The 50 AIGA symbols Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stick figure amp oldid 1218611360, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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