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Best Stick Figure Animation Software – Free Stick Figure Animator

Best Stick Figure Animation Software

Who thought stick figure animation was dead? With all the capability and software out there, guess what, stick figure animation is really cool. Especially with 10 year old boys! It’s really popular with boys, and it’s all about stick men fighting. It’s really quick for them to make, which is a huge plus, and it’s all about action, another plus. My son picked it up straight away, no training needed. He loves it and its a great outlet for life’s frustrations. So what is the best stick figure animation software, and is there a great free stick figure animator out there for you to try today? Absolutely.

At the moment we are using Pivot and we’ve also tried Stickman & Elemento. Pivot is the best to get started really quickly with no learning curve at all, my son was animating as soon as we opened the programme. Stickman & Elemento however, needs a bit of learning first, it was frustrating at the start, but it has lots of promise and lots of potential.

Remember free software is often made by a programming enthusiast and they are not always able to make it user friendly as thats a completely different skill.

If you really get into it, here is a little blog on the history of stick figure animation from Know Your Meme.

By the way, none of these are affiliate links, I don’t benefit from telling you about them, I’m just offering you the fruits of my own research. Just in case you wanted to know!

Cutout Pro, Stickman & Elemento

The promotional site Cutout Pro

The information Wiki site

OS:  Windows

I’m putting this one first because there is just so much potential in this software package. Stickman is the animation software and Elemento is the figure editor. Together they make up Cutout Pro, because you can basically make cut out animation on your windows PC. The two come together, so when you open Stickman, each time you choose ‘create figure’ Elemento will open for you to make your character. You can then save these figures and import them into Stickman, there is also an online library of stick figures that you can import and use in your project, these are called up from within the software. This is a great piece of software, as it is good for more than just animating stick figures. So it’s easy to use, and you can start of making stick men fight each other all day, but you can then progress to more creative and involved characters, adding sound, editing and so on. It also has basic expressions, so it’s great introduction to programming too.

This is an amazing film made with Stickman, so you can see the potential here:

Although the current version 5.6 does cost, its only $10 USD. However there is a free version, the Alpha version of 5.7. It seems to have been developed from about 2002 by Sven Nilsen, the last update was in 2013 where it has reached V5.7.026.

This isn’t promoted much and seems to be aimed at primary schools, and I believe it is installed in many. In the UK Animation is now on the curriculum in year 5, so this may be one of the things they do then.

Free Stick Figure Animator - Cutout Pro, Stickman & Elemento

Key features from the website:

  • Import PNG, JPEG, GIF, PSD (Photoshop)
  • Animate in Photoshop or GIMP
  • Create line drawings on infinite canvas
  • Animate with key frames, control points, switches, matrix
  • 3D-like interpolation of size
  • Path tool
  • Pick up and drop items
  • Control body poses, switches with keyboard
  • Generate walk
  • Create your own figures
  • Unlimited undo and redo
  • GDI+, AntiGrain rendering with OpenGL acceleration
  • Deform and effect nodes
  • Slide physics for “line rider” like simulation
  • Pivot Stickfigure 2.2.5 integration
  • Speech bubbles
  • Unlimited cameras and animation length
  • Expressions
  • Many features for reusing graphics between projects
  • Sound with animated triggering, volume and pan
  • Record sound util
  • Export to 9 popular video formats
  • Export to Flash
  • Snapshot a frame, export frames as PNG sequence
  • Stop motion, capture video of desktop or webcam util
  • Put video clips together

Free Stick Figure Animator - Cutout Pro, Stickman & Elemento

There is a YouTube Channel for the training here. The main YouTube channel is here, and has a range of interesting videos.

PROs

It does a lot, has lots of potential. Its free, or very cheap. Lovely colour picker system!

CONs

You will benefit from watching the tutorials and spending just a little time figuring out what to do.

Download STICKMAN & ELEMENTO here.

 

Pivot Animator

Pivot website

OS:  Windows

Free for personal and commercial use. The business model creates revenue from adware in the software installer, which you can remove or opt out of, and revenue from YouTube ads, but this is what keeps the software free to use for everyone. It really is easy and fun to use, here is a ‘how to’ video we made.

This is possibly the most well known and popular stick figure animation software of its time. The software was made by Peter Bone for his brother who needed something very user friendly and simple to use, that was back in 2004, now it is widely used and available in several different languages, the latest release was V4 in 2016. The idea behind it was to make stick figures that could be animated easily simply by dragging their limbs and joints into different positions, and the proportions would stay the same because each limb is jointed with a pivot. Just like a cardboard cut-out figure joined with paper fasteners.

Here are the Key features:

  • Easy to make animation
  • Create simple figures
  • Load your own backgrounds including bitmap images
  • Position your figures with easy to use handles
  • Frame by frame animation and keyframes
  • Create cycled movie clips and give them motion in the scene
  • Export animated gifs, sequence of images or avi videos for YouTube
  • Help and user forums
  • Tutorials are provided by Pivot users and fans on YouTube and there is full user help on the website
  • Official YouTube channel for Pivot by Peter Bone

Here is a video showing the New Features of Pivot 4.2

As well as how to’s on YouTube there are also useful series of Watch Me Animate by Pivot fans, which give you a great insight into what is involved in creating animations with this software, heres one of a great series:

PROs

Very simple to use, focused on doing one thing very well and very simply. You can start without any kind of tutorial. It comes with some predesigned characters and you can download more characters from Droidz that other people have made and animate them, but it’s also super easy to make your own figures.

CONs

The software does not support sound, so you have to import your animation to another package to do that. This is not really a bad thing anyway, because this keeps the software simple and easy to use. Each stick figure can only be one colour, but the benefit of this is that you don’t have to worry which parts of the figure are in front or behind, so it makes animating simpler. Character editing and creation is done in a separate window so it’s hard to see how it fits in your scene, but now in Version 4 this window has a transparency setting so this is not really a problem anymore. Oh, and it’s not available for Mac.

Download PIVOT here and give it a try!

Dimp Animator

A mac version of Pivot was made and was released for preview at the end of 2008 by Sijmen Mulder. But as far as I can see it was never released. But then Stykz came out and filled that gap in the market. Here is Dimp’s old blogspot.

Here is a little video of it being used on YouTube.

Stykz

Free Stick Figure Animator - Stykz

Stykz website

OS: Mac, Windows, Linux

Originally designed as a subset of pivot it’s the first multi-platform stick figure animation program, and its free for all uses. It was started in 2008, by Ken Ray in response to his children using Pivot and being frustrated at its shortcomings. So far it’s at version 1.0.2 stage. At the moment you can donate to them, but the business model may be to sell upgraded versions of the software, but always have a freemium version to start with.

There are many similarities between Pivot and Stykz: they both support frame based animation, both use key frames, use the Enter key to create new frames whilst dragging an object, undo, create and edit figures, static and hidden segments, scale and rotate figures, drag nodes, the list does actually go on a fair bit. But the key differences are that Stykz lets you do more to segments of a character, it can be used on a mac and exports .mov. A full comparison is here, although it’s with Pivot V3 not V4, you get the picture. But these differences can make Stykz a little more tricky to use, as it gives you more options to learn about.

Free Stick Figure Animator - Stykz

Here is a list of features:

  • Frame based animation
  • Both static and pivoting nodes
  • Stretch and distort a segment during a scene
  • Add and remove nodes from a segment during a scene
  • Create and edit characters directly on the stage
  • Comes with predefined figures that can be used as a starting point
  • Create filled regions with the PollyFill tool
  • Export animated gif, image sequence, transparent PNGs sequence, .mov for YouTube
  • Full help documentation and Tutorials on the website, forums and community support
  • There is also a Windows tool to allow you to convert your Pivot files to be used in Stykz

What’s really interesting to note is what Stykz has on the list for future versions. Here is a sample of what they are working towards: Sound effects and background sound; Transitions and visual effects; Sprites (imported images); Inbetweening; Draw objects (polygons, ovals, arrows, etc.), Text boxes and word balloons; Drag-reordering of frames; Grouping of frames into “clips”; Automatic uploading/downloading of .styk files to/from the Forum (or other sharing area for Stykz files). So you can see it has big plans and is planning to go somewhere, however the last update was in 2011.

PROs

Multiplatform software, better than the earlier versions of Pivot, easy to use, easy to animate.

CONs

No sound yet, but planning to add it at a later date. No background images, doesn’t support bitmap, but you could create simple backgrounds with shapes.

Download STYKZ here.

TISFAT (This is Stick Figure Animation Theater)

Free Stick Figure Animator - TISFAT

OS:  Windows

TISFAT is like Pivot, but speeds up the process because you can place keyframes along the timeline and the tweens will be created for you. It seems to have more features and the timeline looks like Flash. It looks and sounds great.

However this software does not have its own website, and as far as I can see is no longer supported, I really can’t find much about it online, just abandoned websites from around 2012. I can’t find when it was made or who by. So I can only assume that it is no longer around, although you can still find downloads for it.

The most recent review on YouTube doesn’t get us that much closer to a reliable download.

Key features are here:

  • Drawing primitives (lines, rectangles, bitmaps, polygons, text)
  • Simple ready-to-use stick figures
  • The ability to create any custom stick figure, with as many limbs as you choose
  • Attaching bitmaps to limbs
  • Drawing stick figures as curves
  • Create-A-Scene, enabling creating animation through physics
  • Edit and run-time onion skinning
  • Tracing of a video background
  • Setting alpha values of every element
  • Rotation of most elements
  • Export to popular formats (Animated GIF, AVI, Flash)

Here is a YouTube video tutorial showing you the use of TISFAT

You can see from the screenshots of TISFAT here how similar the timeline is to Flash.

Stick Nodes

Free Stick Figure Animator - Stick Nodes

Phone App

Stick Nodes website

Download from Google Play 

Download from Apple App Store

Stick Nodes is a simple and robust stickfigure animation program for android and apple mobile devices. You can create animated GIFs and MP4s by animating stickfigures right on your tablet or phone. There is a free version of the app which has ads and a watermark, but the Pro version is only $2.99. The developer, Ralph Damiano, started off as a keen Pivot user and built Stick Nodes in 2014.

Free Stick Figure Animator - Stick Nodes

The key features include:

  • Automatic frame-tweening, to make your animations smoother
  • Add sound effects to the frames of your animations, (PRO version only)
  • A virtual camera to move and zoom, make your animations cinematic
  • Filters such as blur, saturation, inversion, glow and tint (PRO version only)
  • Variety of shapes, color/scale on a per-segment basis
  • Gradient colors, too to make your stickfigures look realistic or cartoony
  • Textfields make it easy to add text and dialog to your animations
  • Ability to create, save, import, and share stickfigures you create
  • Thousands of awesome stickfigures available on the website for free
  • Compatibility with Pivot-created STK files (version 2.2.7 and earlier)
  • Clean, mobile-inspired interface – pinch-to-zoom for ease and convenience
  • Forward and backward onion-skinning for precise animating
  • An undo/redo system, don’t worry about fat-finger mistakes
  • Export to GIF (free version) or MP4 (PRO version only) for your Youtube channel!
  • Stick Nodes community

PROs

Very immediate to use and fun. Best used on a tablet.

CONs

Annoying to use on a phone. My son’s assessment “great for me, annoying for my fingers, I’d prefer to do this on a laptop”.

Draw A Stickman

Draw a Stickman

Draw A Stickman website

Well this is not animation software by any stretch, but because this blog is for kids, I thought that if the older kids are making stuff on Pivot or Stickman, then the really little ones can get to see their own stickman come to life with this, so they feel included too, and at not extra effort to you.

Draw a Stickman – Find the web game here. You can literally draw a stickman and see them become part of a story. Great for younger kids, where they will get to see their little stickman drawing start to move on its own without any effort on their part. The magic begins!

Epic 2 – Now available on the Nintendo Switch and Wii – draw a stickman and guide it through an epic stickman adventure. Find it here.

I think from this list you can find the best stick figure animation software for you. There is a great free stick figure animator out there for everyone, even if you are not supposed to be a kid anymore!

Please post a link to your stick figure animations on YouTube in the comments below!

And if you hear of any other free stick figure animation software, tell us about it in the comments.

Thank you for reading, and I hope you give one a try.

Lucy Lee

12 Comments

  1. I used to love watching stick man fighting each other when I was a little kid. It is just something that appeals to young boys just like you’ve mentioned in your post. I always wondered how long it takes to make for example a 2 minute stickman fight video! Now I can understand the process better and it actually does not seem that difficult altough I’d think that it still takes some time animating all the different scenes. Have you made stickman videos yourself?

    • Thanks Simon, my son makes stick figure videos with Pivot, he makes about 30 seconds in about half an hour, or an hour or more depending on the action. Pivot allows you to make each frame yourself it doesn’t tween for you, however the Stick Nodes app does tween for you, so you only need to set the keyframes and all the frames in between (the ‘tweens’) are generated automatically. This means that you could make 2 minutes of animation (two characters fighting) in maybe 30 minutes (if you didn’t have to stop and think about the actions), maybe an hour, or more if you want to perfect the action. But really I need to do several blogs on this topic – How long does animation take to make – how long is a piece of string! In the world of animation its a very in depth topic… (please also note that for a video to be watchable for two minutes it would need a pretty good story!). Thanks for this comment it has highlighted several more blogs to write!

  2. This looks like so much fun. Thank you for sharing this information with us. My kids love to play around with different types of animation and computer programs. Maybe this will be something good for them. I have four boys that are homeschooled and I think this could be something they are interested in checking out.

    • Great! Thanks Jessica, I will be adding some pretty cool resources for kids in the weeks to come, there are some awesome resources for kids to make interactive stuff and learn programming skills in a creative environment, as well as loads more free animation tools and fun things to do, so bookmark the page and keep coming back, as animation is such a cool way to learn so many skills: drawing and art – observation and looking; making stuff – visualisation and confidence; animating – concentration and persistence; programming – technology; sound and music, story telling, editing, organising ideas. Actually this has given me an idea for a new blog – why making animation is good for kids education! Thank you so much for this comment!

  3. Hi LucyLee
    First before anything else, congratulations on your website. I love it. From content to the detail, you have really provided all the information one would ever need to begin animation at whatever level.
    Website is very clean and attractive ..luv the color scheme and layout! My website is in development and just looking at yours, I’ve already picked up some ideas- Thanks!
    It seems that your knowledge and experience in animation will serve you well moving forward. I really don’t have much to say other than i’m very impressed and hope to take some inspiration from your layout, with your permission of coarse.
    Again, thank for allowing me to comment
    Thx- Kvant

    • Thanks Kvant, my aim is to build a useful resource for various levels. I’m starting with the newbie section, for people young and older who want to give it a try, and I will be adding a student section to help with theory and practice, and then lots of cool stuff to try for artists and professionals who want to experiment. At the moment the website is just the default Hero theme from wordpress, but when I change the theme I’ll certainly keep it as clean and easy to use as possible! Thank you for your feedback.

  4. Hello, Lucy Lee! Spectra speaking, and i want to say thanks for creating this website! it shows off the creativity that kids such as me can learn from and how it can change our minds once we go further in life. thanks for creating this website, i really love it, i hope i can get to learn this when i enter 6th grade, since i’m going there this year! -Best regards, Beaux Bourque

    • Thank you Spectra! Thank you so much for letting me know that you appreciate the site. It means a lot to know that it helps people. I must keep adding more. I am actually making some online courses to teach people more about making animation. The courses for kids will be free. So in the next few months, you should see a link on this site for a course or two, and I aim to add more as time goes on. So if you are not learning what you want at school, just drop me a message for what’s missing and I’ll make a blog post or course because I’m sure lots more people will want to know the same things. Thank you so much.

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