As the title suggests does anyone have ideas for additional badges for SO?

I liked the idea of 'hidden' ones that are triggered by odd, random criteria. Basically Easter eggs.

Also:

  • Member of all 3 stack overflow sites

Edit: Made it a community wiki so people can edit easier.

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I wonder if we could get Jeff to comment on the status of badge requests. – jjnguy Jul 9 '09 at 13:26
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I, too, wonder if we could get @Jeff Atwood to comment on the status of badge requests. – Randolpho Apr 14 '10 at 13:34
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@Randolpho: I'm pretty sure that @ thing only works for names of people have actually spoken somewhere above your comment... – SamB Apr 15 '10 at 18:34
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locked by waffles Jul 28 '10 at 2:17

120 Answers

I would like to see a higher level of specialist badges. Maybe even considered as a new badge level. Platinum Specialist Badge.

Something like 10x the amount of votes needed as the gold specialist badge.

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Or just as hard to obtain... the Jon Skeet badge. One week has expired, and you answered the same question as Jon Skeet but YOU got more up votes. – Brian R. Bondy Jun 28 '09 at 13:00
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The scary thing is that Jon would already qualify for this in C# – Marc Gravell Jun 28 '09 at 22:08
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Just because you can't imagine how I'd get more votes than myself doesn't mean it can't happen ;) (For one thing, I could post two answers :) – Jon Skeet Jun 29 '09 at 6:54
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Fan Boy (or Fan Girl) - only ever answers/asks questions on one language (most likely Objective-C)

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I like it too, but it would have to be actually measurable -- 30 consecutive answers to questions that all shared the same tag.... – John Pirie Jun 29 '09 at 12:35
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Not a behavior we want to encourage. – Joel Coehoorn Jun 29 '09 at 12:51
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Scatter Gun - more that 5 answers to the same question, each must have 2+ votes.

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That would encourage spamming. :/ – Arnis L. Jul 4 '09 at 12:47
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Spammers don't need encouraging, but it might encourage poor answers. – rjstelling Jul 4 '09 at 12:49
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Spammers wouldn't get upvotes... there's no problem with this – Zifre Jul 8 '09 at 14:52
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As I suggested in this post, I think we should have a Sidekick badge for those who frequently contribute to upvoted or accepted answers via comments.

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A check from Knuth: Being the first to find a bug and report it.

Other title suggestions welcome.

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Or just "$2.56" – Simon Brown Jul 25 '10 at 13:59
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Welcome Back

Awarded when someone returns after 30 days away from the site. It could be made "harder" by adding the condition that they post and have at least one upvote.

Would be a nice present to people returning and might encourage them to stick around this time.

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So it's a reverse Enthusiast? – random Oct 24 '09 at 14:46
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Here are some alternative names: Off The Wagon, The 13th Step (when an addict is now in control of their addiction: silkworth.net/magazine_newspaper/real_sep_1965.html) – gnostradamus Nov 2 '09 at 21:05
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Gold badge that would be awarded for an answer that satisfies both Necromancer and Enlightened criteria, i.e.:

First answer to a question more than 60 days later that was accepted with at least 10 votes.

Not sure exactly what to call it, maybe Enlightomancer, White Wizard or even Gandalf.

This would be a good incentive for well researched answers to long-forgotten questions.

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But as you would already get both the Necromancer and Enlightened badge (plus Nice Answer for good measure) do we really need another badge? – ChrisF Jan 18 '10 at 15:42
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Do we really need any badges? I think it would be sufficiently rare and hard to get to merit gold, and it would encourage a good habit – Rich Seller Jan 18 '10 at 16:07
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Stalker - For having more than 20 upvoted answers on different questions by the same user. In other words, following someone around on SO answering their questions.

Paparazzi - For having more than 20 upvoted comments on different answers by the same user.

Single - For posting an accepted answer on February 14th.

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Well, I guess we know now that @random is single. No guy with a girlfriend or wife would be allowed to forget 2/14. – gnostradamus Jan 21 '10 at 22:03
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@Downvoter: Love? I thought Valentine's Day was a celebration of chalky, antacid-like candies made from bone meal and earwig honey. ;) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweethearts_(candy) – gnostradamus Feb 4 '10 at 17:42
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@gnostradamus - they're not all chalky; some are waxy and some are chocolate. (also: earwig honey?? eww...) – quack quixote Feb 6 '10 at 14:03
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+1 for single.. – John Gietzen Feb 9 '10 at 4:43
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Donator
Received x upvotes on wiki answers posted on non-wiki questions.

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This is tricky to award because technically, there's no guarantee that your upvotes will be for that user's content. You could easily award this badge for "seed" answers. – Grace Note Jul 13 '10 at 14:09
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A seed answer would be the root from which a real answer grows. In other words, someone else might have posted the original answer, and as CW encourages other people to add their say, it evolves into a lovely answer that attracts many votes. Note that I don't think seed answers are bad - after all they yield good answers and are perfectly a good idea. But I think it kinda conflicts with what you might be intending for your badge (with a name like "Donator"). But I could be wrong, I could see a seed being a perfect setup of a donation, the first cent that starts a revolutionary benefit. – Grace Note Jul 13 '10 at 14:45
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[Silver] Silk purse - Edited someone else's question with a negative vote count which later reaches a score of 2 or greater before it is edited again by anyone else.

Thanks Ether for the name.

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"Made a Silk Purse from a Sow's Ear"? :) – Ether Jul 11 '10 at 19:52
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"Plz help" if you're fixing obnoxious grammar? – Andrew Grimm Jul 12 '10 at 0:05
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Encyclopædian

Contribute to a tag wiki.

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Bouncer

Cast your first close vote.

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The Harry Enfield "You don't want to do THAT!" badge.

Awarded for an answer that tells the questioner they're doing it all wrong, without any constructive suggestion on how to do it right.

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One for the win32/usenet spambots ;-p – Marc Gravell Jun 28 '09 at 22:08
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No way to tell this programmatically, is there? – mmyers Jun 29 '09 at 17:28
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The Misery Guts badge.

For people who've issued more downvotes than upvotes. Do they really think that the majority of content on SO sucks?

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Pointing out that an answer is wrong, is potentially more important than indicating the one correct answer is better than another correct answer. I don't think down votes should necessarily be discouraged. – SpoonMeiser Jun 28 '09 at 14:31
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I respect downvoters, to a point. 50/50 seems about the limit. But all upvotes feels too much like grade inflation. – John Pirie Jun 29 '09 at 12:48
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Gleaner: Answering two old (2+ months) unanswered questions in a row, with at least 1 upvote for each answer.

It's to catch the guys who systematically go through the old questions.

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XKCD - a comment that gets someone to fix their answer: someone is wrong on stack overflow.

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On an unrelated note, bobby-tables is a tag in stack overflow. – Andrew Grimm Aug 6 '09 at 1:24
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How would this be calculated? – Ether Dec 11 '09 at 5:27
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Power Overwhelming - Hitting rep cap X days in a row.

EDIT: Now with the epic and legendary badges, they are similar, but this one is for X consecutive days.

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Collaborator -

The intent is to distinguish the editing of answers from providing supportive and helpful comments. Editor and Strunk&White, IIRC, can be attained simply by editing your own posts. In addition not everyone has the rep to edit other people's answers. ...just a thought that there should be a distinction.

For example: SO question 2211388/serialize-object-to-xml-problems
I may know the answer, but there is an answer with a good start. Sure, I'll up-vote it (or at least I should). Then, instead of competing for the accepted answer, possibly duplicating most of the already up-voted answer and embellishing with some campaign style code snippets, I support the one already there.

I think this encouragement could produce higher quality answers. The downside to this, obviously, is how it could be implemented. I hope my explanation makes sense.

One possible implementation could be an icon only visible or click-able by the OP (?), or an additional option in the flag that tags the comment as supportive and collaborative.

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Strunk & White. Not Skunk. – SLaks Feb 8 '10 at 15:02
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Specialist Badges - Bronze
Lasted 15 days in the 30-day top 20 answerers list for a specific tag.

Probably should require x number of questions posted in the same time frame to prevent gaining the badge on tags that only have a few posts.

Survivalist
Lasted 30 days in the 30-day top 20 answerers list for any tag.

They're the same badge, except if it were implemented as a specialist badge you could earn one per tag. I wasn't sure if Jeff wanted bronze specialist badges however, so Survivalist is intended as an alternative.

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Voted 100 times on answers at least 5 months old.

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Power Level badge, for users with over 9,000 rep.

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I'd like to see the 'Strunk & White' badge extended to reward those who edit and improve answers. The difficulty is working out whether the editing is just for getting the badge, or whether it is genuinely improving the questions and answers. (Clearly, editing your own entries wouldn't count.)

I'm not sure what to call it - Strunk & White sets a rather high standard to start out with. And I'm not sure whether to make S&W a badge awarded multiple times - say on 100 edits, and then every 1000 after that, or whether to find a new name (Super Editor? Vim or Emacs - at the recipients choice? Nitpicker?) that is awarded every 1000 edits or so.

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'Soul of Wit': getting many, many, votes for a very short answer.

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Kitten-saver Someone has asked a question and put their own answer on it within five minutes of asking. You come along with a better answer, and they accept yours rather than their own. Therefore you're preventing God from killing a kitten. Alternatively it could be awarded for preventing someone from parsing HTML with regular expressions.

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The Work Shy Fop Badge

A bit like the Woot! badge, but only awarded if the site is visited more than once every working day (Mon - Fri) and never visited at weekends.

Skizz

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In Israel the work week is Sunday-Thursday. You'd think developers would be more aware of these things by now... – Kobi Sep 9 '09 at 10:07
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@RobH: Probably the same way the Enthusiast and Fanatic badges do it. – mmyers Feb 5 '10 at 22:22
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I'm not sure the exact specifics of this mechanism, but I've seen/had happened to me before where an answer is accepted, then unaccepted, then another answer was accepted in its place.

I think there should be a badge for "stealing" acceptance in this manner.

Note that this "stealing" has nothing to do with plagiarism. It's about improving an accepted answer with another answer that's even better. Sometimes I suspect that if a question already has an accepted answer with a few votes, even if it can be improved upon, people don't bother (perhaps because they don't think it'd be as rewarding because they're "too late"). Having this badge would encourage people to always try to come up with the best answers possible, regardless of whether or not there's already a decent one accepted or not.

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This is close to the Populist badge. Or, if I rephrase, the Populist badge already encourages to post better answers even if there is already one accepted. – Pascal Thivent Apr 15 '10 at 3:43
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Corrupt wisdom: have an accepted answer with 10 upvotes featuring at least 42 combining characters.

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Monopolist

Received a golden tag badge for a particular tag while no one else has received a silver tag badge for particular tag yet. Or at least someting in those lines. It should award valuable contributors in "niche" tags who doesn't collect enough voteless answers to qualify for Unsung Hero and Tireless and like so.

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I kind of like this, but at the same time I don't ever see it implemented. It's one of those first come, first serve ideas that reward being the first prominent member on the site to be interested in a particular tag. Anyone who joins after you gain the first silver can't get the badge even if you've lost interest. – Andy E's head Jul 26 '10 at 18:29
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@Andy: Fair point. The tag criteria should maybe be revised. Percentage of votes/answers/accepts as opposed to the amount of questions and the votes/answers/accepts others received in the particular tag during the period you were active? – Chichiray Jul 26 '10 at 18:36
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Revisionist - Based on the ratio of posts to edits for the original author of a post. The higher the number of edits, the closer to the badge you get.

Perfectionist - Based on the ratio of posts to edits by anyone, including the original author. The lower the number of edits, the closer to the badge you get.

I don't know where the badge threshold would lie for these, but I think they would encourage better quality in posts.

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Coconuts from Mercia — Asked a question with 10 or more up-votes that was then migrated to a different SOFU site.

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