A surprisingly legible 5×10 pixel font, with distinct glyphs (capital I/lowercase L aren't just vertical lines, "zero" has a backslash line through it), based on a font that I made for a now-lost Visual Pinball table (explaining its name).
This font supports the basic latin alphabet, numbers, and symbols, and also includes accented latin characters. There is an incomplete set of hiragana characters included, but it's far from complete. Some glyphs such as the copyright symbol, registered trademark symbol, and Japanese characters are 10×10 pixels.
A font where the only restriction is that any glyph can take up only 6 blocks (3 tall, 2 wide) of space in appearance. This means that composites and nudging something into that area from outside are fair game. I think it came out pretty well, aside from things like @ and &. I always seem to have trouble with the ampersand... Of course, the limited size, when combined with the limited bank of blocks, means that there are some problems, like the 8 having a bulge in the middle, the K looks silly, and 2... just look at it. Ugh. Second published font!
This is a clonePixel Font version 1.5
For all the supported characters, see here: pastebin.com/As5gzSf0
This is a cloneA typeface based on the text of Dummy Lyrics's logo.
Dummy Lyrics is a rock band based in Fukuoka, Japan. I do not belong to it; I'm working for them as a freelance translator and English lyricist, and designed their logo. Since this font is based on that, I can't allow commercial use, but you're welcome to any amount of personal use as long as you credit me.
If anyone knows of any way I could improve the kerning (some letters should almost slot together) I'd be very grateful if you'd let me know.