XCOM Barracks Character Archive

Nudes A Poppin 2013 Photos -

In 2013, you were either blending in with a monochrome black-and-white outfit (think Kanye’s early Yeezus tour style) or you were screaming in highlighter yellow, electric blue, or millennial pink. Pastel chinos for men and pastel shift dresses for women were staples. The contrast is what made the photos "pop."

2013 was the year streetwear officially took over the high-fashion runway. A "Poppin'" gallery from this year is incomplete without the oversized silhouettes that defined hip-hop style.

Keywords: Beanies, flannel, leather backpack, choker. These photos are often slightly under-exposed with a flash. The subject is leaning against a brick wall, holding a skateboard they don’t ride. The style is effortless chaos—ripped tights under denim shorts, an oversized band t-shirt (The Smiths or Nirvana), and combat boots. The hair is messy, dyed pastel pink or lavender. nudes a poppin 2013 photos

No photo gallery from 2013 is complete without the sideways snapback hat. Brands like Obey, The Hundreds, and Yupoong dominated. The pose was crucial: a slight head tilt, a "resting baddie" face, and a loose grip on a can of Arizona Iced Tea or a pair of Beats by Dre headphones.

Looking at a fashion and style gallery from 2013, you’ll notice the devil is in the details. These are the items that instantly date a photo to that specific year: In 2013, you were either blending in with

Keywords: Snapback, gold chain, printed t-shirt, joggers. This was the year of A$AP Rocky and the "Pretty Flacko" aesthetic. Men in poppin 2013 photos are wearing bright printed hoodies (often from brands like Obey, The Hundreds, or Diamond Supply Co.), snapbacks worn slightly tilted, and clean white Air Force 1s. The pose is crucial: arms crossed, slight lean, direct eye contact. The background is often a graffiti wall or a car meet.

Fashion is cyclical. In 2024/2025, Gen Z has rediscovered low-rise jeans, but they are also looking back at 2013 with fresh eyes. The poppin 2013 photos fashion and style gallery is no longer just an archive—it’s a mood board. When you scroll through a poppin 2013 photos

We are seeing the return of:

When you scroll through a poppin 2013 photos fashion and style gallery, you aren’t just looking at old clothes. You are looking at the last moment before smartphones became hyper-intelligent, before fast fashion fully collapsed into micro-trends, and when a "fit pic" was still a little bit raw.

After eight years of service, the XCOM Barracks is shutting down.

The XCOM Barracks was a place for XCOM 2 fans to upload, share, download, and rate their favorite custom characters for the game. Using the game's Character Pool, players could create, export, and import characters to be featured as the game's heroes and villains.

The XCOM Barracks was created by two college students and fans of the XCOM series when the game released in 2016. Since then, over one thousand characters were uploaded to the XCOM Barracks by the end of its lifespan.

After eight years of hosting and several major life and job changes, the site no longer functions quite as well as it used to, and we no longer have the bandwidth nor commitment to continue its upkeep. We believe, like all good things, the time has come for this site to end.

Nevertheless, we're tremendously proud of what we created, and we're incredibly honored to be a part of XCOM history. As a parting gift, the entire XCOM Barracks character archive is available (see links above) for download. The archive is sorted by user rating, starting with the highest rated characters in XCOM Barracks history. Each character .bin file contains an adjacent .json file which contains details for each character, including author and description.

An enormous THANK YOU to the hundreds of authors who shared their creations on the XCOM Barracks and users like you who have come to witness the best of what the community has to offer.

And of course, THANK YOU to Firaxis Games, 2K, and all the developers of the XCOM series, for the countless the memories of joy and grief brought by the game.

As always: Good luck, Commander. We will be watching.