Most people don’t even have that many posts 
It’s almost like you are playing in GOD mode 

Most people don’t even have that many posts 
It’s almost like you are playing in GOD mode 

I have been around for a while 
Yes, @Kumirei is a forum wizard - more than 10 likes on nearly every single post 
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Or… well… I won’t spoil the joke…
Yes!
And even then you are more of an outlier than norm 
In Chihayafuru, the characters decide to put cats and pups in videos because that would increase their numbers for followers and views on YouTube.
At WK, all people need to do to get likes is tag @Kumirei in the post 
Genius! Imagine the likes I could have gotten if I did this!
You’ll also find that find linking My Journey of 368 days will get you a guaranteed @jprspereira like 9 times out of 10.
I think people already give you all their likes 
I am not sure if they have any left
not unless WK decides to increase the likes quota per day 
We need to be able to store our unused likes per day. That way we won’t run out on days where the POLL thread ends we run out of likes.
I dedicate my heart to this!

I don’t think I’ve ever even gotten to the third layer. I would be kind of curious on how much larger the counters would be if the campfire was included.
Pretty sure campfire is included for these, as I don’t have 20k posts outside of campfire
Wait, I am just being stupid, those are the total number of those badges, I was looking in the wrong place, lol
Yametekudastop!
I started creating half-assed mnemonics for all words containing 人, always using Jeans/Gin or Nintendo in the mnemonic. Works great so far!
This is the exact reason that I switched to pure かな input. 
Just as aside, but very few Japanese people actually use kana input. It’s much, much more common to use an IME, simply because it’s much more convenient than learning and maintaining muscle memory for two keyboard layouts. Therefore, you average Japanese typist will be double tapping N for ん just the same. As somebody who works for a large Japanese company said:
“I’d guess that about half the JIS notebooks and JIS external keyboards I see on other peoples’ desks have hiragana sublegends on them and about half don’t. In either case, nobody uses the hiragana sublegends to enter text. Even Japanese people who don’t speak any English use the romaji (English) legends when writing stuff in Japanese.”
Yep, I’m aware of that. (I looked into it quite a bit before I decided whether it was worth it for me.)
But, being a programmer by trade, and having a split keyboard, I already have a rather different layout from others. Memorizing extra connections and converting between different layouts isn’t a big issue for me. I often have to do it over a weekend, anyway.
Thus, it’s more about an issue of “thinking in kana” for me. I wouldn’t necessarily recommend it to anyone that isn’t already comfortable with those kinds of switches, e.g., most anyone else. 
I’ve heard this logic before and I’d still advise against it, simply because there’s no evidence that ‘thinking in kana’ has any benefit towards learning the language. Using the IME will, ultimately, be far more useful to nurture in the long term.
And I get it, I really do, I’m in computing myself and had a split ortho Colemak Mod-DHm layout with blank keys as my daily driver for months, but I always come back to this; if kana input was useful for Japanese then Japanese people would use it.