Recreation of the pixel font from Serge Payeur/Ubisoft's "Peur sur Amityville" (1987) on the Amstrad CPC.
Note the inclusion of the "square root" character, which is used as part of the story. The original game seems to only include the lowercase "é" and "è" diacritics (and they both look the same, with the accent just being a horizontal line above the letter). In this recreation, I expanded this to include "ê" and "ë", and to apply the same approach to the lowercase accented "a", "i", "o", "u", and "y". Lastly, this recreation includes a "ç" character, which was absent from the game.
Apart from these additions, only the characters used in the game have been included.
FS glitch found!
This is a clone of Calculator MatrixA faithful recreation of the nostalgic 8-bit font with an IBM Code Page 437 character ROM-based twist.
While it has only 381 characters, I'll strive to work hard on this one.
Fast Facts:
The Famicom was released in Japan on 15 July 1983. It was released in the United States on 18 October 1985 as the Nintendo Entertainment System.
Note the Super Mario Bros. and Tetris games use the other J instead of this one I custom made for this font.
A reminder:
This is not a direct clone of this font (aptly named Super Mario Bros. NES) released on 18 October 2016, noting the creation date of this font below.
The FontStructions that are created and/or made available on this Site are the copyrighted work, of the respective creator.
Commentary Guidelines:
Take note that any derogatory comments targeted against the Font, Font Designer(s) is not welcome in this site. Also, do not request any download access or license changes in the comments. You risk having your FontStruct account deleted, if you do so.
Recreation of the pixel font from Ubisoft's "Fer & Flamme" (1986) on the Amstrad CPC.
The same font is used in "L'Anneau de Zengara" (1987), with different arrow characters.
Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
This is the extended calculator font.
This is a clone of Calculator MatrixA faithful recreation of the nostalgic 8-bit font with an IBM Code Page 437 character ROM-based twist.
While it has only 381 characters, I'll strive to work hard on this one.
Fast Facts:
The Famicom was released in Japan on 15 July 1983. It was released in the United States on 18 October 1985 as the Nintendo Entertainment System.
Note the Super Mario Bros. and Tetris games use the other J instead of this one I custom made for this font.
The FontStructions that are created and/or made available on this Site are the copyrighted work, of the respective creator.
Commentary Guidelines:
Take note that any derogatory comments targeted against the Font, Font Designer(s) is not welcome in this site. Also, do not request any download access or license changes in the comments. You risk having your FontStruct account deleted, if you do so.
Recreation of the pixel font from Palace Software's "The Sacred Armour of Antiriad" (1986) on the Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum, and Amstrad CPC.
Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
Recreation of the pixel font from Ubisoft's "Hurlements" (1988) on the Amstrad CPC.
Note that this font is incomplete, missing all numbers except "2". It also doesn't include any accented characters, with the exception of German diaeresis/Umlaut characters.
Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
This font is a recreation of the font used in Pokémon Red/Blue/Green/Yellow Edition for the Game Boy consoles (except Game Boy Micro) with extended characters.
The English version of the "m" and "é", the "PK" and "MN" symbols, the Pokédollar sign and the letters with apostrophe ("c'", "d'", "'d", "j'", "l'", "'l", "m'", "'m" (English, Italian and French versions), "n'", "p'", "'r" (English and Italian versions), "s'", "'s", "t'", "'t", "u'", "'v" and "y'") are located in the Private Use Area block using from codepoint U+E000 to codepoint U+E017.
NOTE: The extended characters are made by myself.
Feel free to write your opinion.
Recreation of the pixel font from Enix's "Dragon Warrior IV" (1992) on the NES.
Identical to "Dragon Warrior III" (1990), except for the full stop and ellipsis punctuation marks, and the absence of the semicolon.
Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
This is a clone of Dragon Warrior (NES)Recreation of the pixel font from Enix's "Dragon Warrior III" (1990) on the NES. Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
This is a clone of Dragon Warrior IV (NES)Recreation of the pixel font from Enix's "Dragon Warrior II" (1990) on the NES. Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
This is a clone of Dragon Warrior (NES)An unofficial demake of Monaco Regular at 9 point.
Monaco is only available as a pre-installed font on Apple computers.
This font currently contains the FontStruct Basic Latin character set (ASCII + curly quotes). If it gets 100 downloads, I’ll add OpenType Std (Windows ANSI + Mac OS Roman) characters.
An extension of Computer Says No by Christian Munk.
This is a clone of Computer says noRecreation of the pixel font from Mastertronic's "The Curse of Sherwood" (1987) on the Commodore 64, Amstrad CPC, and ZX Spectrum.
Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
Recreation of the pixel font from The Game Kitchen/Team17's "Blasphemous II" (2023).
Expanded slightly to complete the accented characters. Otherwise, only the characters used in the game have been included.