How long till I become an org legend

.𝐏𝐍𝐄𝐔𝐌𝐀𝐓.

.𝐏𝐍𝐄𝐔𝐌𝐀𝐓.

È meglio parlare o morire?
Joined
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How long do you guys think? I think that in a year I’ll have the status and more too if I’m being honest

I have a whole plan (I don’t but I’ll make one maybe)

And I’ll get my checkmark and shiiet

But one thing is certain
I WILL reach it YUH HEARD

PNEUMAT out
 
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2050
 
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you will reach it when i have:forcedsmile:

IMOGGER out
 
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I won’t because I’m a midwit contrarian
 
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You're like 40 percent there
 
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How long do you guys think? I think that in a year I’ll have the status and more too if I’m being honest

I have a whole plan (I don’t but I’ll make one maybe)

And I’ll get my checkmark and shiiet

But one thing is certain
I WILL reach it YUH HEARD

PNEUMAT out
when you stop signing off on your own posts, my grandma does the same with her texts :lul:
 
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@Master may I please get a free VIP for life🥺 I love you so much🥺
 
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How long do you guys think? I think that in a year I’ll have the status and more too if I’m being honest

I have a whole plan (I don’t but I’ll make one maybe)

And I’ll get my checkmark and shiiet

But one thing is certain
I WILL reach it YUH HEARD

PNEUMAT out
Post on TikTok and get famous you'll become an org legend
 
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You're like 40 percent there
If my calculations are right than that means that I will reach 100% within a year since I joined less than a year ago
 
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Not anytime soon son. I’ve been here more than half a decade if you factor in my previous account too which ended in a controversy, but that’s a story for another day.

Being a .org legend requires precision IQ skills and a an early join date that no blue tick mark or money can buy.

I was here when the forum needed me, I was here when the forum was dry, I was here when the forum had less than 10k people which is the amount of newfags joining here now every 2 weeks or so. No dude joining post 2024 can replicate that.
 
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Not anytime soon son. I’ve been here more than half a decade if you factor in my previous account too which ended in a controversy, but that’s a story for another day.

Being a .org legend requires precision IQ skills and a an early join date that no blue tick mark or money can buy.

I was here when the forum needed me, I was here when the forum was dry, I was here when the forum had less than 10k people which is the amount of newfags joining here now every 2 weeks or so.
I will proof you wrong…

It takes something more than iq and persistence… and I have that something burning bright inside of me…
 
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"hey Chudlarper_67 could you take out the trash bins so the garbage truck could pick them up - love grandma (grandma name) P.S. could you clean up the cat poop near the driveway"
See das what I’m talkin abt
 
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I’ll be straight with you: becoming a “legend” on a niche forum like Looksmax isn’t really about looks alone—and chasing that status too hard can pull you into some unhealthy patterns. But if what you’re really asking is how people gain influence and reputation in those spaces, there’s a clear pattern.


First, consistency beats everything. The users who become “known” aren’t the ones who post once with a crazy transformation—they’re the ones who show up every day, post regularly, and build a recognizable presence. Over time, people start associating a name with certain types of content or opinions. That familiarity alone creates status.


Second, they provide value in a way that fits the culture of the forum. On Looksmax-type sites, that usually falls into a few categories:


  • Detailed guides (fitness, skincare, grooming, etc.)
  • Personal experiments (before/after progress, routines, results)
  • Analysis (breaking down facial features, trends, or “aesthetics”)
    The key is that their posts don’t feel lazy. They’re structured, specific, and often backed by either personal results or well-explained reasoning.

Third, they build a persona. Whether it’s intentional or not, “legend” users almost always have a distinct identity:


  • The “scientific” guy who explains everything analytically
  • The “brutally honest” critic
  • The transformation guy who documents everything
  • The controversial one who sparks debates
    People remember personalities more than random advice.

Fourth, they understand attention. Posts that get traction usually have at least one of these:


  • Strong opinions (even if people disagree)
  • Clear visuals (progress pics, diagrams, comparisons)
  • Relatable struggles (people see themselves in it)
  • Curiosity hooks (“I tested X for 60 days, here’s what happened”)
    They’re not just informative—they’re engaging.

Fifth, they interact. A lot. Legends don’t just post and disappear—they reply to comments, argue, help others, and stay visible across threads. That interaction builds both supporters and critics, and weirdly, both help reputation.


Now here’s the part most people ignore: a lot of “legend” status comes from controversy and social dynamics, not just quality. Some users get popular because people argue about them constantly. That can work, but it also means your reputation isn’t necessarily positive—just loud.


Also, keep in mind the downside. Those communities can push extreme standards, misinformation (especially around things like hormones, bone changes, etc.), and constant comparison. If you tie your self-worth to forum status, it can mess with your perception of yourself pretty quickly.


If you still want to stand out in that kind of space, a smarter approach is:


  • Focus on real, healthy self-improvement (fitness, posture, grooming, confidence)
  • Share genuine progress, not exaggerated claims
  • Stay skeptical of “magic solutions”
  • Build credibility, not just attention

Ironically, the people who come across as most “legend-like” are usually the ones who aren’t desperately chasing that label—they’re just consistently useful or interesting.
 
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Reactions: alexias and .𝐏𝐍𝐄𝐔𝐌𝐀𝐓.
"hey Chudlarper_67 could you take out the trash bins so the garbage truck could pick them up - love grandma (grandma name) P.S. could you clean up the cat poop near the driveway"
Also why did your parents name you that? And do you live with your grandma?:HMMMM:
 
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ill see what i can do.
 
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Reactions: alexias and .𝐏𝐍𝐄𝐔𝐌𝐀𝐓.
I’ll be straight with you: becoming a “legend” on a niche forum like Looksmax isn’t really about looks alone—and chasing that status too hard can pull you into some unhealthy patterns. But if what you’re really asking is how people gain influence and reputation in those spaces, there’s a clear pattern.


First, consistency beats everything. The users who become “known” aren’t the ones who post once with a crazy transformation—they’re the ones who show up every day, post regularly, and build a recognizable presence. Over time, people start associating a name with certain types of content or opinions. That familiarity alone creates status.


Second, they provide value in a way that fits the culture of the forum. On Looksmax-type sites, that usually falls into a few categories:


  • Detailed guides (fitness, skincare, grooming, etc.)
  • Personal experiments (before/after progress, routines, results)
  • Analysis (breaking down facial features, trends, or “aesthetics”)
    The key is that their posts don’t feel lazy. They’re structured, specific, and often backed by either personal results or well-explained reasoning.

Third, they build a persona. Whether it’s intentional or not, “legend” users almost always have a distinct identity:


  • The “scientific” guy who explains everything analytically
  • The “brutally honest” critic
  • The transformation guy who documents everything
  • The controversial one who sparks debates
    People remember personalities more than random advice.

Fourth, they understand attention. Posts that get traction usually have at least one of these:


  • Strong opinions (even if people disagree)
  • Clear visuals (progress pics, diagrams, comparisons)
  • Relatable struggles (people see themselves in it)
  • Curiosity hooks (“I tested X for 60 days, here’s what happened”)
    They’re not just informative—they’re engaging.

Fifth, they interact. A lot. Legends don’t just post and disappear—they reply to comments, argue, help others, and stay visible across threads. That interaction builds both supporters and critics, and weirdly, both help reputation.


Now here’s the part most people ignore: a lot of “legend” status comes from controversy and social dynamics, not just quality. Some users get popular because people argue about them constantly. That can work, but it also means your reputation isn’t necessarily positive—just loud.


Also, keep in mind the downside. Those communities can push extreme standards, misinformation (especially around things like hormones, bone changes, etc.), and constant comparison. If you tie your self-worth to forum status, it can mess with your perception of yourself pretty quickly.


If you still want to stand out in that kind of space, a smarter approach is:


  • Focus on real, healthy self-improvement (fitness, posture, grooming, confidence)
  • Share genuine progress, not exaggerated claims
  • Stay skeptical of “magic solutions”
  • Build credibility, not just attention

Ironically, the people who come across as most “legend-like” are usually the ones who aren’t desperately chasing that label—they’re just consistently useful or interesting.
Not molecule son:feelskek:
 
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I’ll be straight with you: becoming a “legend” on a niche forum like Looksmax isn’t really about looks alone—and chasing that status too hard can pull you into some unhealthy patterns. But if what you’re really asking is how people gain influence and reputation in those spaces, there’s a clear pattern.


First, consistency beats everything. The users who become “known” aren’t the ones who post once with a crazy transformation—they’re the ones who show up every day, post regularly, and build a recognizable presence. Over time, people start associating a name with certain types of content or opinions. That familiarity alone creates status.


Second, they provide value in a way that fits the culture of the forum. On Looksmax-type sites, that usually falls into a few categories:


  • Detailed guides (fitness, skincare, grooming, etc.)
  • Personal experiments (before/after progress, routines, results)
  • Analysis (breaking down facial features, trends, or “aesthetics”)
    The key is that their posts don’t feel lazy. They’re structured, specific, and often backed by either personal results or well-explained reasoning.

Third, they build a persona. Whether it’s intentional or not, “legend” users almost always have a distinct identity:


  • The “scientific” guy who explains everything analytically
  • The “brutally honest” critic
  • The transformation guy who documents everything
  • The controversial one who sparks debates
    People remember personalities more than random advice.

Fourth, they understand attention. Posts that get traction usually have at least one of these:


  • Strong opinions (even if people disagree)
  • Clear visuals (progress pics, diagrams, comparisons)
  • Relatable struggles (people see themselves in it)
  • Curiosity hooks (“I tested X for 60 days, here’s what happened”)
    They’re not just informative—they’re engaging.

Fifth, they interact. A lot. Legends don’t just post and disappear—they reply to comments, argue, help others, and stay visible across threads. That interaction builds both supporters and critics, and weirdly, both help reputation.


Now here’s the part most people ignore: a lot of “legend” status comes from controversy and social dynamics, not just quality. Some users get popular because people argue about them constantly. That can work, but it also means your reputation isn’t necessarily positive—just loud.


Also, keep in mind the downside. Those communities can push extreme standards, misinformation (especially around things like hormones, bone changes, etc.), and constant comparison. If you tie your self-worth to forum status, it can mess with your perception of yourself pretty quickly.


If you still want to stand out in that kind of space, a smarter approach is:


  • Focus on real, healthy self-improvement (fitness, posture, grooming, confidence)
  • Share genuine progress, not exaggerated claims
  • Stay skeptical of “magic solutions”
  • Build credibility, not just attention

Ironically, the people who come across as most “legend-like” are usually the ones who aren’t desperately chasing that label—they’re just consistently useful or interesting.
I unironically have like almost all of that🤫
 
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You guys should cherish all the moments that you have had with me knowing I’ll become famous :monkaLaugh:

“Yo bro I actually once talked with PNEUMAT he was so cool and shiiet”

That’s how you all are gonna talk yk?
 
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jfl org legend doesnt exist anymore, only did when this site had less than 30k users.
 
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keep posting stuff abt rick and morty
 
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jfl org legend doesnt exist anymore, only did when this site had less than 30k users.
You just say that cause you don’t want me to succeed 😡
 
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