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Stickman VS Friday Night Funkin' is a mod of the game Friday Night Funkin' which is a crossover with JzBoy's Stickman VS series. It has Boyfriend challenge Jack CopperZ the Stickman to a music battle despite Jack showing no actual interest.

The mod contains three songs in story mode (Sticking, Fight, and Serious) plus two bonus songs (BoomBox and a modified version of Bopeebo) which are accessable in freeplay.

Not only that. but there is also a secret song that serves as a crossover with another series JzBoy does titled The Wrath Soul done to promote the third part to that story.

The mod was made by JzBoy and can be downloaded on Gamebanana.


Song List:

Main week:

  1. Sticking (Jack)
  2. Fight (Jack)
  3. Serious (Jack)

Bonus Songs:

  1. Boombox (Jack)
  2. Bopeebo (Jack)
  3. Wrath Soul (Daisy)

Tropes

  • Abnormal Ammo: Jack throws several microphones at Boyfriend during "Fight". Boyfriend returns the favor towards the end of the song.
  • All There in the Manual: Jack is never referred to by his actual name in-game.
  • Beat Them at Their Own Game: Boyfriend is usually portrayed as getting rap battles out of people by provoking them through annoyance. Now he's the one getting frustrated by Jack's adamant refusal to play the game by its usual rules, only getting one normal song out of him out of the five Jack has in the mod.
  • Dreadful Musician: Jack's piano playing (at least when the camera is focusing on him) isn't the best, to say the least.
  • Easter Egg: How Daisy and her secret song is discovered; clicking on one of the videos to the side during the YouTube video intro.
  • Guest Fighter: Daisy, from the Wrath Soul series.
  • Have a Nice Death: When Boyfriend gets a game over here, instead of getting blue-balled, Jack tosses him away offscreen, continuing has him do the same to Jack.
  • Meaningful Name: "Serious" is the only song that is done in a serious manner, as it is the only song that Jack actually sings to.
  • Non-Fatal Explosions: At the end of Sticking, Jack starts turning the stereo Girlfriend is sitting on to off, prompting him and Girlfriend to fight over turning it on and off repeatedly until it explodes. Both he and Girlfriend come out of it okay.
  • Role-Reversal Boss: In "Sticking", "Fight", "Boombox" and "Bopeebo", Boyfriend is the one who takes the lead, with Jack half-heartedly trying to mimic him with various tools between attempts to get Boyfriend and Girlfriend to go away.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: At the end of Serious, Jack storms out in frustration.
  • Shout-Out: While playing on the piano during Sticking, Jack will at one point play a melody akin to Megalovania.
  • Shows Damage: After transforming into her Wrath form, Daisy then proceeds to slowly break down as the song progresses. This is because she can't handle her own powers.
  • Stylistic Suck: For the first two songs, Jack doesn't provide any notes of his own. Instead he relies on a recording of the Boyfriend's voice which he occasionally plays off key, and a piano which, when onscreen, he plays badly at much to the annoyance of Boyfriend and Girlfriend. When playing Bopeebo, Boyfriend sings the part that Daddy Dearest did while Jack uses the recorder to poorly do Boyfriend's part.
  • Tranquil Fury: Near the end of "Fight", after having endured getting pelted by a microphone for the last time, Boyfriend clearly has had enough of Jack's shenanigans and is no longer singing to salvage the song. No smug grin, just Boyfriend visibly Angry. Shortly after-ward does Boyfriend let his fury be known via a barrage of microphones that outnumber the amount he had to endure, knocking out Jack.
  • Troll: Jack seems to like annoying Boyfriend, either by repeating his voice back to him via a boombox, playing a piano horribly, or just using his microphone as a weapon.
  • The Voiceless: Outside of "Serious", Jack doesn't make a single noise, using either a boombox or a piano in order to hit notes.

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