A variant of Marrada with more angles.
Usually with designs I try to make every part look like it "belongs" with the others as opposed to trying to make each part look its best. With Marrada, I struck a balance between the two. Q1@*&{} are probably the best examples of this sort of balance...
This is a clone of MarradaA combination of many small disparate elements. Like "Space Wham" it tries to harmonize angles and curves, but it does it by letting complementary glyphs have them as opposed to using them both in a given glyph. I broke this rule to make "Marrada Angle", though.
This is a cloneVersion 1.1
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A font designed and optimized for writing very small and dense math equations, especially those related to ESOSVM. This should make cramming equations onto a small canvas much easier.
I included A-Z and a-z so you can write with the font or use the letters to declare variable names. So it isn't just a "pure math" font like most other mathematics fonts I have seen around.
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DIAGRAMMING PIECES
These are still being drawn and tested. The sizes these have to be will depend on the sizes of all other glyphs, so these pieces will be made last.
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ANIMA OPERATORS
` - skein
@ - infH (infinitude of harmony)
# - infD (infinitude of dissonance)
_ - rskamacha
Ó - Palkyl's number
Ô - Marräd's number
Õ - Ehnetahinian void
Ö - Quanta/Phenom interface
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LILTS
& - aShift
* - kShift
Ø - Phlogistian
Ù - Quintessential
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PHENOMS
ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐ - quanta
Ñ - Marinanian constant
Ò - Dheenian constant
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Version 1.1: Improved and shrank the tokens so that they can fit into the corner of an unflipped tile.
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This is a set of tiles that can be used to create mockups and pieces for the Piecepack board gaming system. Dice not included!
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26 tiles (UPPERCASE) - ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
12 token designs (lowercase) -abcdefghijkl
10 pawn designs (numbers) - 1234567890
Included are reverse sides as well as wildcard/Joker sides (normally not present in Piecepack). These are always the last two in each series.
By request, a skewed, spooky sans-serif.
"Xenopyre" is an anagram of "Pyroxene", in much the same way as this design is an analogue of Basalt.
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See also:Basalt, Dethzmezenger
Vector art used for the Halftruth Lens and Deceptive Lens in the game Naively. These are pecuilar objects which impart the holder with certain visions relating to things the holder wonders about.
These lenses and the symbols' meanings are randomized each game, so the player never knows beforehand which lens is which. Below is what would be the default layout for an unseeded game...
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A,B,C,D,E,F,G - thank you, no, yes, maybe, you're right, you're wrong, silence
H,I,J,K,L,M,N - you're right, maybe, yes, no, silence, thank you, you're wrong
O,P - you already know, it's nothing we have discussed
The original Scaffo Stencil - the plain version.
Swapping between the two produces an interesting effect which I'd like to explore more.
This is a clone of Scaffo StencilA really tiny font which uses only about 15/64 of a brick per glyph. This could have been even smaller, of course, but I wanted it to be readable, so I used 3x5 forms. This means I can do a 3x4 lowercase later if people want it.
Is there any practical use for this? Probably not. But, at the original size, the entire Lorem Ipsum text takes up about half of one line, so that's something. :D
A skeletal design related to Candylander, Nyandotte, Straplander, etc. This one works as a stencil and reminds me of dazzle camouflage! There's also a plain version of this which looks much neater and less harsh, but I like this one more.
A squared-off Chisato Pixel. This loses a bit of style, but has much simpler geometry and is much easier to read. A few glyphs are identical as well, so this is now a Mixed Case design.
Despite its seeming simplicity, I enjoy this design very much. I've added it to ESOSVM under the name "ChiP".
This is a clone of Chisato PixelA variant of Radio Grave which took many hours to produce. I think the effort was worth it! This is a functional Multi-font and can produce a broad range of effects, especially when used at down near the original size.
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Shading Rules:
1. Use the darkest tone on the outermost concentric region and get lighter as one progresses inward.
2. Let the 5x5 region surrounding the exact center of each glyph use the lightest tone, except when this would place the lightest tone into its neighboring region.
3. Glyphs with diagonals and glyphs which use a smaller than 5x5 drawing area may bend rule 2 for the sake of more consistent and/or interesting shading.
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See also: Fuzzy Logic
Original size: 12.75pt (use multiples of this size for pixel perfection)
This is a clone of Radio GraveWhen life gives you halflemons, make Halfade!
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This is what I call a Plain Spurless design. There are no actual spurs, only right-angled corners to suggest spurs. All lowercase letters are like this except r, which is a Rounded Spurless because it needs to curve to avoid looking like Γ, and because it's only 2 bricks wide so there's no other place for it to curve.
I made this to have mostly right angles, to have a condensed look (see filrt), and to be good for speedreading. My own experiments in speedreading favored glyphs with simple curves which don't terminate in small arcs (see CGJSZfgjrsyz@()[]{}). There are exceptions (c2369?$) because these are more recognizeable when they have such arcs. Additionally, glyphs such as BPRXY have slightly rounded counters near the vertical center, which enhanced their readability without causing them to look out of place.
The remainder of design considerations were things which are fairly idiosyncratic and unlikely to be discovered by others. For instance, the descender of Q is 2 bricks, while lowercase letters' descenders are 3 bricks and symbols' descenders are 1 brick. This is the result of a technique that attempts to visually codify different cases & types of glyphs. The slightly different contours thus formed by each word on its underside seem to enhance both readability and aesthetics.
Welcome to Orwellian Barcode Prison, antithesis of Chicken Wire. The only thing to do here is squint.
Version 1.1: Added Polish.
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A combination of deco, sci-fi and modern elements.
This was made to be a compact subheader font and to be used alongside fonts such as "Badwolf". In fact the original name of this font was "Chibi Wolfclan".
A font inspired by the use of eggplants in video games. Many video games have unexpected eggplants in them. This is FontStruct's unexpected eggplant.
I decided to fill in the lowercase to add some variety. Hit SHIFT for shiny glyphs.
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See also: Spellforged Servitor
A continuation of ideas in Candylander Plain. Half-arcs couple with short ascenders and descenders to make this.
Hollow version of Radio Grave. Though it's not a cipher, it does have a cryptographic look about it...
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Original size: 12.75pt (use multiples of this size for pixel perfection)
This is a clone of Radio GraveAn experimental doodle that reminds me of guitar straplocks.
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See also:Candylander
A multi-outline design with intentional aliasing.
At the original size, it looks nicely textured. The illusions become more harsh as one zooms in.
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Original size: 12.75pt (use multiples of this size for pixel perfection)
By request, a "waffle stencil".
This is an E6x6 broken into nine 2x2 fields. The larger and the more precisely cut it is, the more readable it becomes!