User:JohnnyMrNinja
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My name is JohnnyMrNinja, although I am not a Johnny, nor am I a Ninja. I will neither confirm nor deny Mr.
My first (registered) edit.
My ongoing project is to empty Category:All free media by deleting copyvios, retagging fair use, and moving the rest to Commons. Only 144,614 left! (480,611 7/1/2010).
This user is a participant in WikiProject Video games. |
This editor is a Senior Editor II and is entitled to display this Rhodium Editor Star. |
This user knows your mother (and will say "hi" to her for you) |
This user is a member of the Arcade Task Force. |
GAME OVER | This user will insert more coins to continue. |
This user mashes buttons. Real hard. |
HIGH SCORE | This user will beat your high score. |
Feeling supersecret? Feel free to email me, though I check it not so often.
Sometimes I go to a Village Pump and go "Oh yeah, I forgot I did that." I was experimenting with a new search functionality and it worked out pretty well. Now they're everywhere but whatevs.
Commons:User:JohnnyMrNinja - not much there, just some icons I made for things I was working on.
User:JohnnyMrNinja/Water in popular culture
Commons picture of the day
View of the Geiranger Church, the surrounding cemetery and the famous Geirangerfjord in the back. The parish church belongs to the Church of Norway and is located in the village of Geiranger, Stranda Municipality, Møre og Romsdal county, Norway. The wooden church was built in a octagonal style in 1842 by architect Hans Klipe but on the same spot there had been previously a stave church, which was torn down in 1742 and a second one that was burned in 1841.
View of the Geiranger Church, the surrounding cemetery and the famous Geirangerfjord in the back. The parish church belongs to the Church of Norway and is located in the village of Geiranger, Stranda Municipality, Møre og Romsdal county, Norway. The wooden church was built in a octagonal style in 1842 by architect Hans Klipe but on the same spot there had been previously a stave church, which was torn down in 1742 and a second one that was burned in 1841.