liledix⁴ (also liledix4, or simply liledix, pronounced as “lil-ediks-four”) is the biggest contributor in Bombs vs. Sleepwalkers franchise who happened to be its creator back in early 2010s. As of April 2026, he keeps contributing to BvS, being even more committed since the 2023 Reboot.

When there are no people who are able to contribute to the project (they may be busy, or the project itself is under-advertised), liledix⁴ does the maintenance and content creation alone, whenever it’s possible.

The WhatThe Details
Nameliledix⁴
Pronounciation of the namelil-ediks-four
Alternative forms of the nameliledix4
liledix
Real nameEd
Roles in BvSComposer
Writer
Director
Web developer
Wiki maintainer
Graphic designer
Pronounshe/they
Resources

Roles in the project

Primarily, liledix⁴ is a composer.

  • Mention more roles of liledix⁴ in the Bombs vs. Sleepwalkers project.

Skills

liledix⁴’s skillset is changing constantly and regularly.

  • List the skills liledix⁴ has.

Resources and how to reach out

Trivia and fun facts

  • liledix⁴ uses “he/they” pronouns. He explains it like this:

    liledix⁴:

    I never were truly masculine and never warmed to being “a man” in a classic sense. I have some traits you would likely describe as feminine. I like having long hair, I can freely use perfume meant for women, I can wear pink or violet, quite often my clothing have unisex elements or something slightly feminine-leaning. Yeah, yeah, I know, all of those are bad and unhelpful stereotypes, I’m not supporting them, but I’m bending the rules where I can. This is my sport, ha-ha. 😄

    While I’m not a trans, in my later years I’m getting more comfortable with “they/them” pronouns because it describes me just right. But I’m not letting go of “he/him” yet, because I know it’s uneasy for other people to see me as non-masculine or not purely masculine (if “masculine” is the box they’re comfortable to put me in, so be it) and, to be honest, I’m not that selfish. 😄

    It does somewhat affect my writing for Bombs vs. Sleepwalkers and other projects, because I personally find it comfortable to write “strong women with emotional vulnerabilities”: they can be skillful, they can be masterful, but when it takes to relationships or sacrifices or hard choices, they may break. This is tasty drama. I can’t do that easily with the men, while, interestingly, I’ve noticed other people find women harder to write than men—somehow I can’t agree with it, for me it’s the other way round. Not to mention that “female psychology” resonates with me better somehow. That’s why women are prominent in my writing. Not because of “waifu” element, but because it’s simply comfortable this way, I’m more productive here as a writer.

  • Yeah, I know, it’s a bit cringey to read about the person who actually wrote this page but in the third person. 😅 But that’s the rule of wiki, that’s how it works. 🤷