Animator vs. Animation
This article needs additional citations for verification. (August 2024) |
| Animator vs. Animation | |
|---|---|
Logo used in the Season 2 finale poster | |
| Also known as |
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| Genre | |
| Created by | Alan Becker |
| Written by |
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| Directed by |
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| Composers |
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| Country of origin | United States |
| Original language | English |
| No. of seasons | 3 |
| No. of episodes | 12 |
| Production | |
| Producers |
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| Running time | 3–31 minutes |
| Original release | |
| Network | Newgrounds |
| Release | June 3, 2006 – October 2, 2014 |
| Network | Atom.com |
| Release | November 4, 2006 – October 4, 2010 |
| Network | YouTube |
| Release | September 12, 2007 – present |
Animator vs. Animation (AvA) is an American animated web series created by Alan Becker.[1][2][3] The original animation was first published on Newgrounds on June 3, 2006,[4] with a sequel following five months later.[2] Almost every installment is animated in either Adobe Animate or Blender, with live-action scenes also being incorporated into the series, starting with the fourth episode.
The premise of the web series is a stick figure attempting to escape the animation program in which it was created, either by using the built-in animation tools or through sheer brute force.[5] The series contains almost no spoken dialogue.[6]
Known for its unique concept and high-quality animation, it became an immediate internet hit, receiving 4.78 stars on Newgrounds[7] and 80 million views on YouTube.[8] The fourth installment gained almost 5 million views on YouTube within a month.[9]
A Kickstarter campaign for a reboot episode of the series was created on July 10, 2013,[5][10] reaching their $10,000 funding goal on August 9, 2013. The episode was released on October 2, 2014.
Multiple browser game adaptations of the series have been created, including one in 2006 titled Animator vs. Animation Game: SE, developed by Charles Yeh.[2]
Characters
[edit]Humans
[edit]- "The Animator" (a self-insert of Alan Becker): The titular character. He initially showed disdain towards his creations, before showing more care to them after learning that one of them (The Second Coming) could talk through text.
Stick figures
[edit]Artificial Stick Figures
[edit]Four hollow-headed stick figures all created by the Animator at different points in the story.
- H4CK3R (formerly victim) [sic]: A black (later gray) stick figure created in June 3, 2006 by the Animator. He debuted in "Animator vs. Animation" before seemingly being killed off in the same episode.[11] Nearly seventeen years later, he was revealed to have ultimately escaped Macromedia Flash via a rocket after being recreated and tortured by his creator countless times throughout 2006 and 2007, turning dull gray and being marooned alongside an animated female character known as Mitsi. The two create a technology company called Rocket Corp together and live a peaceful life in the Outernet until Mitsi is killed by victim's successor, The Chosen One/The Dark Lord, in 2011. This prompts victim to track him down over the coming years with the help of four mercenaries. He later tricks the Animator into changing his name to H4CK3R, granting him tech-based reality-warping abilities before teaming up with The Dark Lord.
- The Chosen One (TCO) (now "NO ONE"): A black stick figure, originally almost identical in appearance to victim, was created in 2007 by the Animator.[12] He has several superpowers, including fire-breathing, laser vision, and superhuman strength, creating ice, among others. He debuted in "Animator vs. Animation II" as a villain and was presumed dead after the next episode before reappearing at the end of "The Virus", having redeemed himself to defeat The Dark Lord. In Animator vs. Animation 12, H4CK3R downgrades The Chosen One by changing his name to NO ONE.
- The Dark Lord (TDL): A red stick figure, created by the Animator in 2011,[a] programmed solely with the mission of destroying The Chosen One. He[13] debuted in "Animator vs. Animation III". He was presumed dead in the same episode, only to reappear in "The Flashback" as a villain seeking to spread havoc across the internet with his army of computer viruses. He was killed by The Second Coming in "The Showdown", but was revealed in "Hacker" to have been resurrected by his minions, the ViraBots, reprising his role as an antagonist by teaming up with H4CK3R.
- The Second Coming (TSC): Also known as "Orange". He is an orange stick figure accidentally created by the Animator in 2014 and the leader of the Stick Gang. In almost all animations he appears in, The Second Coming is depicted as being a completely normal stick figure, much like the other figures he meets the same episode in which he is introduced, albeit with far more honed fighting abilities. However, he has hidden powers and capabilities that make him one of the most potent figures currently introduced in the series. These powers include telekinesis, flight, laser vision, extremely powerful strength, and regeneration. These abilities have only surfaced temporarily through vague means.
Fighting Stick Figures
[edit]A group of four solid-headed stick figures consisting of Red, Blue, Yellow, and Green was introduced in 2014. Residing on sticksfight.com, they escaped with the help of The Second Coming before each being terminated by the Animator, then subsequently revived. They were later killed by The Dark Lord during "The Showdown", only to be revived again by The Second Coming.
- Red: A red stick figure that loves animals. He is reckless and most impulsive of the Stick Gang.
- Blue: A cyan stick figure that likes farming and brewing potions. He's been described as a "hippie" and has an addiction to nether wart in the Animation vs. Minecraft spin-off.
- Yellow: A yellow stick figure that likes computer programming. In "The Box" he is kidnapped by victim's company, Rocket Corp, to manifest the Animator in the Outernet.
- Green: A lime stick figure who likes music and is The Second Coming's best friend. He is arrogant and, as karma, suffers the most out of the Stick Gang.
Mercenaries
[edit]A group of four stick figures with unique designs and fighting styles. Excluding Ballista, the mercenaries lack official names and are only being referred to with community-created nicknames.
- "Agent": A thin, dark gray stick figure of above average height who wears sunglasses. He has a solid white head with a dark gray outline, identical to his body, and possesses a toolbar that gives him the powers of an animator. Despite being grouped as part of the mercenaries, the episode "Victim" reveals he is victim's full-time employee, security guard and best friend who watched victim's lover Mitsi die at The Chosen One's hands and wants to avenge her death. It was revealed in a Q&A that his non-canon production name is G.U.I..
- "Hazard": A pictogram portrayed as uncommitted and comical, but also loyal to victim. He has control over any and all pictogram signs, allowing him to use electrokinesis; clone himself; or summon an atomic bomb, among many other powers.
- "Primal": A tall, brown stick figure (similar to stick figure drawings by cavemen) that embodies a wild and untamed nature, often acting on immediate instinct and raw power while having a stronger, more powerful form. His non-canon production name is Lasco, after the cave system he was based on.
- Ballista: A pixelated stick figure that can shapeshift and is short-tempered. He's a crossover character from the 2003 animation Stick Figure vs Door. His non-canon production name is EZToon, after the animation program he was created in.
Others
[edit]- Purple: Purple is one of the main stick figures alongside Red, Green, Blue, and Yellow. Initially introduced as a friend to the others, Purple becomes an antagonist in Animation vs. Minecraft after being driven by power within the Minecraft world. Unlike the Dark Lord, Purple's motivations are not inherently evil; they stem from ambition and the temptation of control over digital elements. Over time, Purple's actions lead to conflict with the other stick figures, though later appearances show him displaying remorse and an eventual desire for redemption. His complex character arc, shifting between ally and adversary, has made Purple one of the most prominent and discussed figures in Becker’s animated universe.
- Pink: Pink is the posthumous mother of Purple. Pink is portrayed as caring, protective, and resourceful, living peacefully with her child before being caught in the larger conflicts of the series. Pink was uploaded to Newgrounds by an unknown animator alongside her husband Navy and her son Purple.
- Navy: Navy, or Dark Blue, is a overarching antagonist, the biological father of Purple, and the husband of Pink. He tried to train Purple to become a fighter before leaving after an argument with Pink about his son's wellbeing. He was indirectly the cause for Purple's evil arc.
- ViraBots: The Dark Lord's minions, a species of computer viruses that take the form of robotic spiders. The majority of them are killed by The Second Coming in "The Showdown", but "Hacker" reveals that a few of them have survived and have resurrected The Dark Lord.
- Mitsi: Victim's first friend and lover, and the co-founder of Rocket Corp. She helped Victim overcome his trauma caused by the Animator's abuse of him. She is killed by what appears to be The Chosen One in "Victim", which motivates Victim and Agent into avenging her death. Victim, as H4CK3R, later teams up with The Dark Lord under the promise of resurrecting her.
- Corn Dog Guy: A tall maroon stick figure with an incredible head for business and an ability to stay calm in many disastrous situations, which he turns into business opportunities. He is apparently saddened when customers ignore him. He was uploaded to the Outernet in March 15, 2007. He was originally uploaded as a side character by Alan, but he quickly went viral on the Internet.
Episodes
[edit]This section's plot summaries may be too long or excessively detailed. (September 2025) |
| Season | Episodes | Originally released | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| First released | Last released | |||
| 1 | 4 | June 3, 2006 | October 2, 2014 | |
| 2 | 4 | August 19, 2018 | October 24, 2020 | |
| 3 | 4 | April 29, 2023 | TBA | |
Season 1 (2006–14)
[edit]| No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Original release date | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | "Animator vs. Animation" | Alan Becker | June 3, 2006 | ||||||||
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The Animator, later known as Alan, creates a black stick figure in Macromedia Flash (now known as Adobe Animate), naming it "victim", after which the stick figure comes to life. Alan immediately engages in combat with Victim, and within Flash they fight with the tools of the program itself. Alan eventually closes Flash, seemingly erasing Victim and the project file in the process. | ||||||||||||
| 2 | 2 | "Animator vs. Animation 2" | Alan Becker | March 15, 2007 | ||||||||
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Alan creates another stick figure, this time naming it "The Chosen One", making the stick figure even more powerful based on in-universe rules established by a discussion between Alan and an AIM friend. This time, The Chosen One jumps onto Alan's desktop and starts destroying his desktop applications and files, his powers making him harder to destroy. Before the computer is shut down, The Chosen One is recognised as a virus by Alan's antivirus software, Avast, and is swiftly captured. This allows the animator to force The Chosen One to work as a pop-up blocker. | ||||||||||||
| 3 | 3 | "Animator vs. Animation 3" | Alan Becker | October 11, 2010 | ||||||||
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Years after becoming Alan's ad blocker, The Chosen One comes across a way to escape. Despite Alan's attempts to stop him, The Chosen One frees himself and immediatly starts destroying applications on the PC like he did before. While The Chosen One is distracted, Alan quickly draws a red stick figure, names it "The Dark Lord", and sends him to fight The Chosen One, who defeats him and convinces him to join his side. They shake hands, allowing them to combine each others' powers. The two team up to terminate Alan's computer by creating a vortex that sucks everything up and explodes, crashing the desktop in the process. | ||||||||||||
| 4 | 4 | "Animator vs. Animation 4" | Alan Becker | October 2, 2014 | ||||||||
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Many years after the previous episode, Alan is animating an orange stick figure whilst chatting with a friend online about the events of the previous episode. While Alan is away from the computer for a bit, the orange stick figure comes alive and finds a website where he meets and befriends a group of four other stick figures. When Alan returns, he immediately goes to delete the four stick figures and realizes that the orange stick figure is called The Second Coming, described by Task Manager as "The Chosen One's Return". Unable to be deleted, The Second Coming sends Alan a message that says: "You ended my friends. Now I will end you." After a long battle on Alan's phone and computer, The Second Coming destroys Alan's cursor and creates his own animations to further the destruction. After Alan deletes the animations, The Second Coming begs for mercy. Impressed by The Second Coming's animation skills, Alan spares him and refreshes the website to bring the other stick figures back. The two agree on a deal that The Second Coming can live as long as he teaches animation to Alan and does not break his computer. | ||||||||||||
| Compilation | ||||||||||||
| – | – | "Animator vs Animation Season 1 (Ep 1-4)" | Alan Becker | July 20, 2024 | ||||||||
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A compilation of the first four episodes reuploaded together, with adjustments made to the first three episodes to fill widescreen 16:9 aspect ratios. Sound effects were also replaced with higher quality versions of the originals. | ||||||||||||
Season 2 (2018–20)
[edit]| No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Original release date | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | 1 | "The Virus - Animator vs. Animation 5" | Alan Becker | August 19, 2018 | ||||||||
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One day, as Alan and The Second Coming are animating together, it a computer virus program named "ViraBot" appears to infect the computer. as Alan and The Second Coming try to remove it, a red, four-legged spider-like creature emerges from the program, seemingly able to disintagrate anything. Even as The Second Coming gets his friends, everyone's attempts to destroy the ViraBot fail. Before ViraBot can end The Second Coming, a portal is opened and The Chosen One, revealed to still be alive, comes out and battles the ViraBot. | ||||||||||||
| 6 | 2 | "The Chosen One's Return - Animator vs. Animation 6" | Alan Becker | October 28, 2018 | ||||||||
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The Chosen One and the ViraBot battle, with the former proving himself immune to the latter's deletion powers. The Chosen One and the ViraBot show themselves to be very powerful, and The Chosen One eventually defeats the ViraBot. As the Stick Gang (The Second Coming and his 4 friends) bows down to The Chosen One in respect and gratitude, The Chosen One creates a second portal and leaves the computer. Hesitant at first, the Stick Gang follows him. | ||||||||||||
| 7 | 3 | "The Flashback - Animator vs. Animation 7" | Alan Becker | March 12, 2019 | ||||||||
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In a flashback, it is shown that at the end of "Animator vs. Animation 3", The Chosen One and The Dark Lord escaped Alan's computer before it was destroyed. The two start terrorizing the Internet and various video games, although The Chosen One appears to feel off about doing so more and more as time goes on. Years later, in a digital world called the Outernet, The Dark Lord invents the ViraBot. After failing to prevent The Dark Lord from launching the Virabot, The Chosen One goes to save the person it was sent to, despite finding out that this person is his creator. After The Chosen One battles the ViraBot, he and the Stick Gang travel across the portal to the Outernet. | ||||||||||||
| 8 | 4 | "The Showdown - Animator vs. Animation 8" | Alan Becker | October 24, 2020 | ||||||||
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Back in the Outernet, The Chosen One tracks down The Dark Lord and engages him in an intense battle. As The Dark Lord starts getting the upper hand, electronics-knowing Yellow (one of The Second Coming's stick figure friends) hacks The Dark Lord's computer to summon Alan's cursor so Alan can join the fight. The Dark Lord deletes the cursor and kills The Chosen One's friends, but is unable to delete the Chosen One himself. In a display of power greater than either The Chosen One's or The Dark Lord's, The Second Coming destroys him in a giant blast, revives his friends and Alan's cursor, and passes out. The Second Coming wakes up with no recollection of having such powers, leaving The Chosen One as the only on-screen character alive that knows about them. The Stick Gang returns to the computer. | ||||||||||||
| Compilation | ||||||||||||
| – | – | "Animator vs. Animation Season 2 (Ep 5-8)" | Alan Becker | December 5, 2020 | ||||||||
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A compilation of episodes 5-8, with edits made to fix continuity errors and alter the soundtrack. | ||||||||||||
Season 3 (2023–)
[edit]| No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Original release date | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9 | 1 | "Wanted - Animator vs. Animation 9" | Alan Becker | April 29, 2023 | |
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A long time later, The Chosen One becomes a wanted figure pursued by four mercenaries and, recalling what he witnessed in the past, seeks out The Second Coming for help. Although The Chosen One is unable to restore The Second Coming’s memories or activate his dormant abilities, he brings him into the Outernet to escape. The Second Coming remains largely ineffective until he realizes he can manipulate animations to defend them, briefly aiding in the fight before both are ultimately captured. The remaining members of the Stick Gang witness the pair being transported away by the mercenaries, who deliver them to a mysterious organization where they are imprisoned. There, the mercenaries report to their leader, a gray stick figure who is later revealed to be Victim. | |||||
| 10 | 2 | "The Box - Animator vs. Animation 10" | Alan Becker | November 4, 2023 | |
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The four friends attempt to locate the organization and eventually stow away on a transport truck to reach its facility, where The Second Coming is separated from the others so researchers can study his drawing-based abilities. Inside the building, Victim enters the containment box to torture and interrogate The Chosen One about Alan’s whereabouts, and when he refuses to answer, Victim initiates a memory scan. The scan inadvertently exposes The Second Coming’s powers to everyone present—including The Second Coming himself, who is returned to his cell as the process continues. As the memory reveals how Yellow previously summoned Alan’s cursor, the organization identifies his location and soon abducts him from the facility’s parking lot. | |||||
| 11 | 3 | "Victim - Animator vs. Animation 11" | Alan Becker | December 14, 2024 | |
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In a flashback set between the events of Animator vs. Animation (2006) and Animator vs. Animation II (2007), Victim is shown to have endured repeated torture before eventually escaping into the outernet alongside a newly created stick figure named Mitsi; the two quickly grow close, later implied to share a romantic relationship, and establish a company where they spend several happy years. On the company’s fourth anniversary in 2011, numerous stick figures abruptly vanish—including Mitsi—after being transported to a Newgrounds-themed realm, later revealed to be the site of The Chosen One and The Dark Lord’s destructive rampage. Mitsi is killed in a fireball blast during the chaos, with The Chosen One hovering above the aftermath, a moment Victim later discovers through the memory scanner. Seven years later, Victim witnesses footage of The Chosen One fighting alongside Alan’s cursor and concludes that The Chosen One and Alan are working together. | |||||
| 12 | 4 | "Hacker - Animator vs. Animation 12" | Alan Becker & Skim | September 13, 2025 | |
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Agent, the leader of the mercenaries, captures Yellow and uses a memory-scanning device to learn how he summoned Alan’s cursor, inadvertently revealing that Yellow had previously been revived; The Second Coming briefly senses the event, fails to trigger his own abilities, and begins meditating in hopes of helping him, while the remaining Stick Gang members infiltrate the mercenary base, defeat their assigned opponents, and accidentally release a cherished sheep during their escape. Meanwhile, Agent and Victim attempt to replicate Yellow’s summoning method by manipulating Alan into renaming Victim as H4CKER, granting him a powerful surge that The Second Coming appears to sense; newly empowered, H4CKER strips The Chosen One of his abilities and forces his way onto Alan’s computer, where they fight until Alan disconnects the machine, leaving Victim seemingly isolated. In the aftermath, The Dark Lord, revealed to have survived, approaches Victim and offers an alliance, claiming he can revive Mitsi. | |||||
Development and history
[edit]Becker was inspired by many popular animations and stories, such as Duck Amuck and the 1959 animated version of Harold and the Purple Crayon. Many other Flash games, such as Cursor Thief on Newgrounds, also gave him the spark to create the animation.[14] Approximately three months after starting the animation, Becker posted it to Newgrounds. The next day, the animation received second place for the entire day.[7] Becker began receiving numerous emails and instant messages from website owners who wanted to host the animation on their websites, with one of the websites even offering $75, provided they received exclusive rights to the animation. Becker declined after reading an email above from Steven Lerner, the owner of Albino Blacksheep.[14][15]
AtomFilms offered to fund the making of a sequel, which was released on November 4, 2006.[16][14] Becker used his real AIM username in the animation, which made him unable to use the service without his desktop screen being flooded by hundreds of fans who attempted to message him online. Becker began uploading the videos to YouTube, manually reporting clones of the videos using YouTube's copyright report system, but it reportedly took several years. Becker uploaded "Animator vs. Animation 3" onto Atom.com on October 4, 2010, intending for it to be the final episode. He then went on to study animation at the Columbus College of Art and Design and tried to get an internship at Pixar but was rejected.[14] Becker launched a Kickstarter campaign for the funding of Animator vs. Animation 4 after being motivated by his teacher's words and encouragement to keep going. The campaign launched on July 10, 2013, and the $10,000 funding goal was reached on August 9, 2013.[14] On October 2, 2014, "Animator vs. Animation 4" was released onto YouTube. It reportedly gained almost five million views on YouTube within a month.[9]
eBaum's World controversy
[edit]"Animator vs. Animation" was uploaded to eBaum's World without Becker's permission and proper credit.[17] Legal action was threatened against eBaum's World under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998.[17][18] eBaum's World later contacted Becker, offering him $250 as compensation and pressuring Becker into a false testimonial. Becker later retracted the statement and officially requested that eBaum's World remove the animation and testimonial from the website.[14][17]
Other media
[edit]Game adaptations
[edit]In 2006, a browser game adaptation titled Animator vs. Animation Game: SE was released for Adobe Flash Player, developed by Charles Yeh.[2]
On March 26, 2025, a Kickstarter campaign was launched for Animation VERSUS, a fighting game slated for release in June 2028. The game is being developed with the help of Muno, who created a Rivals of Aether mod featuring characters from the series.[19][20][21]
Spin-offs
[edit]The series has had multiple spin-offs, under the Animation vs. label, with some of them gaining more views than the original series itself.[citation needed]
A spinoff called "Animation vs. Minecraft" was uploaded on December 14, 2015. The video briefly had the title of the most popular Minecraft video on the internet for a month.[22] A companion series, "Animation vs. Minecraft Shorts" (AvM Shorts), which alternates between slice-of-life and serialized storytelling, debuted on November 17, 2017. Its fourteenth episode briefly became the most popular Minecraft video on the internet,[23] and it was Becker's most popular video to date.
Another spinoff, "Animation vs. YouTube", featured cameo appearances from numerous YouTubers, including PewDiePie and Markiplier.[24][25] Actual Shorts are shorts formatted for YouTube Shorts, with the name referencing the fact that most episodes in the Animation vs. Minecraft Shorts series are too long to be considered "shorts", with running times of up to thirty minutes.[26][6]
- Animation vs. League of Legends
- Animation vs. Pokemon
- Animation vs. Super Mario Bros
- Animation vs. Arcade Games
- Animation vs. Education
Reception
[edit]The series has gained a generally positive reception.[27]
Awards and nominations
[edit]| Year | Award | Category | Animation | Result | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 | Webby Awards | "People's Voice" Award | "Animator vs. Animation II" | Won | [10][28] |
| 2014 | Cleveland International Film Festival | "Best of Ohio" Award | "Animator vs. Animation IV" | Nominated | [29] |
| 2024 | Independent Media Initiative | Unknown | "Animation vs. Math" | Won | [30] |
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ While this character's debut episode was released on Atom.com in 2010, Becker confirmed in "The Flashback" that the events took place on October 2, 2011, the day the episode was officially uploaded to YouTube.
References
[edit]- ^ DeMott, Rick (October 12, 2010). "Animator vs. Animation 3 Hits Atom.com". Animation World Network. Archived from the original on July 11, 2025. Retrieved August 14, 2024.
- ^ a b c d Beale, Scott (January 8, 2008). "Animator vs. Animation by Alan Becker". Laughing Squid. Retrieved August 15, 2024.
- ^ "Alan Becker - Biography". IMDb. Retrieved August 15, 2024.
Alan Becker is best known by Internet users as the kid who made Animator vs. Animation. He made it during his junior year of high school in 2006.
- ^ Becker, Alan (June 3, 2006), Animator vs. Animation, retrieved August 18, 2024
- ^ a b Silverberg, David (October 2, 2014). "Alan Becker releases long-anticipated Animator vs. Animation IV". Digital Journal. Retrieved August 17, 2024.
- ^ a b "Animator vs. Animation". TV Tropes. Retrieved August 19, 2024.
- ^ a b Becker, Alan (June 3, 2006). "Animator vs. Animation". via Newgrounds. Retrieved August 18, 2024.
- ^ Becker, Alan (May 14, 2007). Animator vs. Animation (original). Retrieved August 27, 2024 – via YouTube.
- ^ a b Verma, Arpit (November 26, 2014). "This Animator vs Animation Video Goes Viral and Worth Sharing". Fossbytes. Retrieved August 14, 2024.
- ^ a b Nobilt, Jennifer (July 23, 2013). "Becker shooting for 4th 'Animator vs. Animation' installment". The Columbus Dispatch. Retrieved August 22, 2024.
- ^ Becker, Alan; Welch, DJ (July 20, 2024). Animator Vs Animation Season 1 (Ep 1-4) | AvG Reacts. Animators VS Games. Retrieved February 1, 2025.
This is victim, yeah. Yeah, you can see his name right there.
- ^ Becker, Alan (May 14, 2007). Animator vs. Animation 2 (original). Alan Becker. Retrieved February 1, 2025.
he might kill aim soon
- ^ Becker, Alan; Welch, DJ (July 20, 2024). Animator Vs Animation Season 1 (Ep 1-4) | AvG Reacts. Animators VS Games. Retrieved February 1, 2025.
He has fireballs. They're just kind of smaller now.
- ^ a b c d e f Becker, Alan (June 3, 2016). The Story of Animator vs. Animation - 10 Year Anniversary. Retrieved August 18, 2024 – via YouTube.
- ^ "Animator vs. Animation series". Albino Blacksheep. Retrieved August 28, 2024.
- ^ Schechner, Sam (June 22, 2007). "The Joy of Sticks". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved August 27, 2024.
- ^ a b c "June 2006". Albino Blacksheep. May 2006. Retrieved August 15, 2024.
- ^ Becker, Alan (August 8, 2013). "Alan Becker". DeviantArt. Retrieved September 6, 2024.
- ^ Animation VERSUS! - Reveal Trailer - Kickstarter. Alan Becker. March 26, 2025 – via YouTube.
- ^ Cichacki, Shaun (March 26, 2025). "'Animation Versus' Is the Creation of Alan Becker, the Creative Genius Behind 'Animator vs Animation', and It Blew Past Its Kickstarter Goal". VICE. Retrieved April 20, 2025.
- ^ Staff, Game Rant (March 26, 2025). "Animation VERSUS - Official Reveal Trailer". Game Rant. Retrieved April 20, 2025.
- ^ "Alan Becker". YouTube. Retrieved August 14, 2024.
- ^ Amber (August 23, 2024). "Top 5 Most Viewed Minecraft Videos of All Time". BisectHosting. Archived from the original on May 31, 2025. Retrieved July 29, 2025.
- ^ Alan Becker (August 3, 2017). Animation vs. YouTube (original). Retrieved December 18, 2024 – via YouTube.
- ^ "Animation vs. YouTube featured videos". YouTube. Retrieved December 18, 2024.
- ^ Alan Becker (December 3, 2022). The King - Animation vs. Minecraft Shorts Ep 30. Retrieved December 18, 2024 – via YouTube.
- ^ "Alan Becker | Writer, Animation Department, Director". IMDb. Retrieved December 14, 2024.
- ^ "NEW Webby Gallery + Index". NEW Webby Gallery + Index. Retrieved August 15, 2024.
- ^ "Animator vs. Animation IV - Cleveland International Film Festival :: March 22 - April 1, 2023". dev.clevelandfilm.org. Retrieved August 15, 2024.
- ^ @theI_M_I (June 12, 2024). "For "Animation vs Math," @alanthebecker will receive an award of $50,000. Known for his reoccurring YouTube series, 'Animation vs,' he makes stick figure animations and captivates audiences with his mastery of animation while tackling subjects like physics & animation. #IMIAwards" (Tweet). Retrieved August 22, 2024 – via Twitter.
External links
[edit]- 2006 web series debuts
- 2000s YouTube series
- 2010s YouTube series
- 2020s YouTube series
- Internet memes introduced in 2007
- American animated web series
- Action adventure web series
- Comedy-drama web series
- Animated science fiction web series
- Self-reflexive television
- Postmodern television
- Independent animation
- Works about animation
- Works about the Internet
- Television series about artificial intelligence
- Fiction about malware
- American television series with live action and animation
- Television shows adapted into video games