Important Clarification Regarding Neck Anatomy and Carotid Artery Placement:
The OP in this thread contains significant anatomical misinformation, particularly regarding the location of the carotid arteries.
This sentence from the OP, when directing people where to target the carotid arteries is so horribly wrong, I'm absolutely surprised that it is actually stickied here:
"Experiment with the area above the Adam's apple as highlighted. You will probably find your sweet spot there. Jugulars and carotids more easily targetted in this area because there's less things covering them and they bulge out more" - OP
To clarify: the carotid arteries DO NOT converge at the midline of the neck above the Adam's apple and just below the jaw, as the OP implies. Instead, the left and right common carotid arteries ascend along the sides of the neck, lateral to the trachea and larynx. They then bifurcate into the internal and external carotid arteries near the level of the jaw, but remain lateral - not central - throughout their course.
Any method or technique purported to affect the carotid arteries by applying pressure centrally (i.e., directly beneath the chin or at the front of the neck) is not anatomically correct. In cases where pressure results in loss of consciousness, it is typically due to compression at the sides of the neck, where the arteries are actually located.
Promoting or "stickying" information that misrepresents basic anatomical facts - especially when it concerns physiological risks - is potentially dangerous and may lead to serious harm if misunderstood or improperly applied.
TLDR: The carotid arteries run up the sides of the neck - not the center above the Adam's apple, as the original post claims. Applying pressure to the middle of the neck is ineffective and dangerous.