
- Flipnote studio stick fight mods#
- Flipnote studio stick fight series#
- Flipnote studio stick fight free#
In all honesty, however, I don’t think that anything can quite recreate the magic and wonder of the original service when there was a flood of unused creativity coming from even the youngest of children to the skilled artist. However… if you happen to own a DSi and still want to make/watch more flipnotes, there is a fan-made service called “Sudomemo”, which is nowhere near as big as the original in terms of community (obviously since it’s not an official service), but it is still a good service from what I see (a little over-saturated with Undertale flipnotes and single-page drawings, but it’s still decent enough). I can’t entirely recreate the awe and wonder that there was inside of the service back when it was new, and I’m honestly out of things to talk about inside of the service. All I can say is that the community was mostly made up of… emotional teenagers, high-skilled animators, and lazy kids like me. However, the good typically out-weighed the bad in terms of what people added stars on, and, therefore, what you’d typically see on the front page of the service was always decently great (I know that’s a strange combination of words, but it’s the best way to describe it). This was the actual majority of the community, and it was 90% of all the flipnotes on the site.
Flipnote studio stick fight mods#
people constantly making things against-the-rules so that the mods had more work to do and people who posted nothing but drawn “messages” over a whole 100 page animation (most of which had a color layer placed on top of the text so that you were required to download and erase the color to even see the message). On the other side, you had people constantly making “animations” asking for stars, colored stars, comments, etc. This wasn’t the majority of the users of Flipnote Hatena, however. On one side, you had many people making animated cartoon dubs over popular/funny audio, people using pre-existing sprites to make animated “video game” series, people who made unique animations of stick figures very fluently fighting other stick figures, people who made animations dubbed over songs, and people like me who only drew extremely low-quality versions of all of the above. Another thing is that there are these things called “stars” (basically unlimited likes), which you could add to any post if you liked it, hated it, or if it asked nicely, but there were steps above these called “colored stars”, which increased in rarity by color (and you could buy them with real money and give to people who made a really great quality animation). Occasionally, there were weekly animation contests run by the service, where you could make a high-quality animation and have your post put on a pedestal.
Flipnote studio stick fight free#
The most I remember of it, is that you couldn’t sign up on the website like any normal website, but you had to fax (in 2009-2013, mind you) your requested username, password, and service ID to Hatena Co., Ltd.’s offices, which I guess allowed parents to have more control over whether or not their children could join this free community. First off, before you could even fully use the service, you had to sign up, and, believe me, it was way too complicated. But before I get into that, there’s some things I need to detail about the service in general.

These easy-to-use and expansive tools began the perfect storm… called the community of Flipnote Hatena. As for the animation app itself, it was well-made with many tools to choose from, and you could even add sound/sound effects and extremely low-quality pictures. This service was Flipnote Studio (for drawing) and Flipnote Hatena (for sharing online with others). Welcome to Part #1 about Flipnote Studio/Hatena.īack in 2009-ish to 2013-ish, there was an amazing flipbook-style animation-making and online sharing service available for the Nintendo DSi.
Flipnote studio stick fight series#
Welcome to a new three part series (I’ll be releasing all three at the same time) that I’m going to be delving into about discussing three games/services that were a part of my “childhood” (or just nostalgic in general) that I very fondly remember.
