Stickman Fighting Games
Epic Battle: Super Fighters
Stickman vs Stickman
Tall io
Ragdoll Showdown
Stack Defence
Ragdoll Battle Royale! Throw Down the Enemy!
Stick vs Monster School
Ragdoll Battle
Stick It Battle
Stick Fight
Twisted Kick
Run, Forest, Run! Falling Tiles on Lava Floor!
Stickboy Epic Swordsman
A Powerful Crowd
Stick Cards War
Stick Battle: Hidden Power
Run Race 3D
Territory War
Hit Archery Masters: Bow Fighting
Stick Battle: Fight for Freedom
Balance Duel: Ragdoll Showdown
Fight Club - 1 or 2 players
Bed Wars
Stick Archers
Car Battles 1-4 Players
Tug of War 3D
Stickman Temple Wars
Stick Street Fighter
Manstick: New Attack
Amaze Disc
Hero Crusher
Merge Battle Fight
Battle of the Ragdoll Men
About these games
A stickman fighting game strips combat down to a simple stick figure and lets the fists fly. Behind that plain look sits a brawl: you throw punches and kicks, chain combos, block, and knock your opponent down. Many run on ragdoll physics, so a clean hit sends limbs flailing in ways that are half-skill, half-comedy. Some are tight 1v1 duels, others are scrappy free-for-alls. It all plays in the browser on HTML5 and WebGL, so you click a tile and the fight is ready. No install, no signup.
This page is the overlap of Action Games and the broader stickman category. Action games span shooting, driving, and platforming. Stickman games can be runners, drawing puzzles, or archers. The cross-section is narrower: stick-figure combat specifically, where the whole loop is landing hits and staying on your feet. The tone leans teen-ish — cartoon violence with ragdoll flops rather than realistic gore. For a vehicle-combat sibling, see War Tank Games.
The sub-types are easy to tell apart. Ragdoll brawlers lean on loose physics and big knockbacks. Martial-arts fighters give the stick figure real move-sets and combo timing. 1v1 duels pit you against one rival in a best-of round. Beat-em-up waves send a crowd of stick enemies at you. Controls vary: some use a few attack keys plus movement, others map everything to mouse swipes. A fight is short — a minute or two — and you are quickly back for a rematch.
Browse more
Related combinations
FAQ
Are stickman fighting games violent?
They show cartoon combat, not realistic gore. The fighters are plain stick figures, so hits land as ragdoll flops and exaggerated knockbacks rather than blood and injury. The tone leans teen-ish — punchy and a bit rowdy — but it stays stylized. There is no graphic detail because the characters are abstract lines. That makes them milder than realistic fighting games while keeping the impact of a solid combo. The humor in the physics softens the violence.
Do they use ragdoll physics?
Many do, though not all. Ragdoll brawlers simulate loose, jointed bodies, so a hit sends the stick figure tumbling unpredictably and the flailing is part of the fun. Martial-arts fighters lean the other way, using set animations and tight move-sets for precise combos. So you will find both styles here. If you want chaos and big knockbacks, pick a ragdoll title; if you want controlled timing, choose a move-set fighter.
Can two players fight on one screen?
Yes, several stickman fighters offer local two-player on one keyboard. One player takes one set of keys, the other takes a second set, and you duel side by side on the same screen. This is common in the 1v1 duel sub-type. Not every title has it, so check the menu for a two-player or versus option before starting. The single-player modes are more widespread and pit you against AI opponents instead.
How do the controls work?
It depends on the style, but most use a few keys or mouse swipes. Keyboard fighters typically map movement to arrows or WASD and assign punch, kick, and block to nearby keys. Ragdoll titles sometimes simplify it to mouse drags that swing limbs. Combo fighters reward learning timed key sequences. The schemes stay light enough to grasp in a round or two. Try the first fight as a tutorial, then refine your inputs from there.