Sweetxcheeks Stickam Avi -
| Phase | Timeline | Key Events |
|-------|----------|------------|
| Initial contact | June 2006 | Avi, as a moderator for the “Indie‑Games” room, noticed Sweetxcheeks’ rapid growth. He DM‑messaged her offering free audio‑mix services. |
| First joint stream | July 2006 | “Cheeks & Beats: First Playthrough of The Sims 2” – Avi provided background house‑beat remixes while Sweetxcheeks narrated. View count peaked at ~3,200 concurrent viewers. |
| Regular schedule | Oct 2006 – Mar 2009 | Weekly “Cheeks‑Beats‑Live” every Thursday 8 PM CST. Format: 30 min gameplay → 15 min AMA → 15 min live‑DJ set. |
| Peak popularity | Jan 2008 | 10,000+ concurrent viewers for the “New Year Countdown” special (live‑mix of “Auld Lang Syne” + in‑game fireworks). |
| Community milestones | 2007‑2009 | • Charity marathon for Children’s Hospital (raised $4,500).
• “Cheeks‑Avi Remix Challenge” (10,000 submissions). |
| Transition | Late 2009 | Stickam introduced “Gold” subscriptions; Sweetxcheeks & Avi launched a premium “Cheeks‑Club” tier with exclusive emojis and behind‑the‑scenes audio. |
| End of era | 2013 | Stickam shut down; the duo migrated to Twitch (Sweetxcheeks) and SoundCloud (Avi). |
Define the Color Palette
Create the Frame‑by‑Frame Animation
Export as Optimized GIF
Test Across Platforms
Before we dig into the platforms, we must address the identity. "Sweetxcheeks" (often stylized with the letter 'x' as a decorative separator, a hallmark of "scene" naming conventions) was a username utilized by a prominent personality in the live video chat subculture of the late 2000s.
While multiple users may have adopted variations of "Sweet Cheeks" over the years, the user tied to the "Stickam Avi" distinction is generally remembered as a female creator who bridged the gap between the emo/scene fashion movement and the raw, unfiltered nature of early live streaming. Unlike today’s polished TikTok or Instagram influencers, figures like Sweetxcheeks operated in a low-resolution, high-authenticity environment.
Her brand was defined by:
| Aspect | Detail |
|--------|--------|
| Real name | Megan “Megs” Thompson |
| Birth | 1990, Austin, Texas |
| Launch on Stickam | March 2006, under the nickname “Sweetxcheeks” (chosen as a tongue‑in‑cheek nod to the popular “cheeky” meme culture of the time). |
| Core content | • Gameplay walkthroughs (MMOs, early indie titles)
• Pop‑culture commentary (TV, music, memes)
• “Ask Me Anything” (AMA) sessions with fans |
| Signature style | High‑energy voice, rapid‑fire jokes, occasional “cheeky” (playful, not sexual) jokes that made her name stick. She frequently used emotes and custom stickers that became stickers in Stickam’s chat. |
| Community | A tight‑knit “Cheeks Clan” that organized meet‑ups, fan‑art contests, and charity streams. By 2009 the clan had > 12 000 members. |
| Legacy | Early adopter of multiplatform streaming (later moved to Twitch, YouTube, and TikTok). Frequently cited as an influence by modern “variety” streamers. | Sweetxcheeks Stickam Avi
YouTube documentary channels (like Whang!, Internet Historian, and Down the Rabbit Hole) often cover early live streaming. In comment sections, viewers ask for names of top broadcasters. "Sweetxcheeks" is consistently mentioned as the "lost queen of Stickam."
This article exists because of a digital ghost. Around 2012, as Stickam began its decline (the platform officially shut down in 2013), users like Sweetxcheeks vanished. Stickam was acquired and abruptly taken offline, taking millions of chat logs, video recordings, and profile data with it. Unlike YouTube, there was no archive.
Consequently, "Sweetxcheeks Stickam Avi" has become a search term for internet archaeologists. Users on Reddit (r/lostmedia, r/nostalgia) occasionally post threads asking:
Because Stickam had no VOD feature (video on demand), the only remnants are screenshots taken by fans and the static avis that were saved to hard drives in 2009. | Phase | Timeline | Key Events |
As with all lost media, a line exists between archiving and invading privacy. Sweetxcheeks, like many Stickam personalities, disappeared intentionally. When the platform died, many users chose not to migrate to Twitch or Instagram. They aged out of the scene, got careers, or simply valued their anonymity.
While searching for the "Sweetxcheeks Stickam Avi" is a nostalgic pursuit, it is crucial to remember that these images were shared in a specific context (a now-defunct 18+ chat platform) from 2008–2012. If the person behind the username has chosen not to resurface, the community's role is to celebrate the memory and the aesthetic, not to doxx or harass.
The animation loop consists of the hair gently swaying as if caught in a light breeze, while the pixel‑heart pulses in sync with a faint, barely audible chime (only noticeable when the avatar is viewed in the Stickam player, not in a static image export). This level of detail was unusual for the time; many users simply uploaded static PNGs.