Clone of Final Fantasy Adventure GB. Font from Final Fantasy Adventure (1991), Final Fantasy Legend II (1991) and Final Fantasy Legend III (1993), all for Nintendo GameBoy by Square Co. Alternate and extra characters from Final Fantasy Legend III included.
This is a clone of Final Fantasy Adventure GBA recreation of the pixel font from Tecmo's "Silkworm" (1988). The majority of characters are from the NES version, but some particularly awkward ones have been replaced with their equivalent characters from the Amiga and Atari ST version of the game.
Recreation of the pixel font from Nintendo's "Super Mario Land" (1989) on the Game Boy. The same font was reused in other games like "Tetris" (1989), "Dr. Mario" (1990) and "Wario Land: Super Mario Land 3" (1994). Only the characters present in the game ROM have been included.
Update: removed a stray extra pixel in the "9".
This font can be used for your own posters or video games, such as NES, Atari, etc. (This Font is finished, you can now download it. Only Use if you're Latin or English.) Esta fuente se puede utilizar para sus propios carteles o los videojuegos, como NES, Atari, etc (Esta fuente ha terminado, ahora se puede descargar el programa. Sólo uso si eres latino, francés, español o Inglés.) Cette police peut être utilisé pour vos propres posters ou des jeux vidéo, comme NES, Atari, etc (Cette police est terminée, vous pouvez maintenant le télécharger. Utiliser uniquement si vous êtes latin, français, espagnol ou anglais.) Cette police peut être utilisé pour vos propres posters ou des jeux vidéo, comme NES, Atari, etc (Cette police est terminée, vous pouvez maintenant le télécharger. Utiliser uniquement si vous êtes latin, français, espagnol ou anglais.)
Pixel font recreation from Konami's classic "Gradius" (1986). A variation on the generic Nintendo font, most notable in the letters V, Y and in some of the numeral. This font includes the special characters from my standard Nintendoid 1 to make it more generally useful, and for the first time includes the strange "horizontal semicolon" used on most of the early Nintendo games' start screens.
EDIT August 2019: it appears I was off by one pixel on the "horizontal semicolon". Fixed now.
This is a clone of Nintendoid 1