Hershey Dot Cartographic with the 'dot size' increased to 2x, which is more similar to what the paper expected the dot size to be. (In fact, the paper may expect the dot size even larger, but fontstruct's filters don't let it get any larger than 2!)
This is a clone of Hershey Dot CartographicThe main dialog font ("bigfont" in the source code in source/font.h) from the Project Infinity GB demo 1.0.0, with the drop shadow in place. Distributed under the same license as the Infinity GB source code, CC-BY-NC-SA.
Note that the drop shadow of the 'D' is different from the actual game, which has a 1-pixel error in the drop shadow there. Here, it is corrected.
The main dialog variable-width font ("bigfont" in the source code in source/font.h) from Project Infinity Demo 1.0.0, with the drop shadow removed. Distributed under the same license as the Project Infinity source code, CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0
This is a clone of Infinity GBPainstakingly redone from movie screenshots.
Characters guessed: b j q x z " ! @ _ $ + ; [ \ ] ` ~
The ^ caret character is an upward pointing arrow, and is shown in the movie. This is correct based on the old ASCII-1963 standard, where ^ and _ were an upward and leftward pointing arrow, respectively.
I don't believe this font actually matches any specific contemporary terminal from the mid 70s to early 80s, I believe it was done custom for the movie. It is clearly inspired by the character set from several terminals.
One notable feature of the font (shared with several CRT terminals in the 1970s and 1980s) is that no more than 8 adjacent vertical rows within the 7*x10 character cell can be active at any given point. The 'block cursor' violates this, but the circuitry to display that was separate from the circuitry to read the character ROM and shift it vertically.
* Technically the character is 8 pixels wide, but if the 8th/leftmost pixel is set, it will apparently also appear as the rightmost '9th' pixel in the inter-character column, which is undesirable.This can be seen in the custom character set in the movie used for the country outlines during the "UNITED STATES" "SOVIET UNION" "WHICH SIDE DO YOU WANT?" scene. (Either that, or this was an accidental error during creation of those custom characters for the movie.)
The movie also often uses an "overline" character in order to underline the row above, and this occupies an entire row of characters on screen when this happens. Is this the true 'shape' of the underline character?
This is a clone of WOPR TerminalA font based on that used by certain chain printers (or similar printers) in the 1960s-1970s era. This font was generated using a single set of printouts, and might be the font from the IBM 1403 chain printer (with the 120-character "T" chain installed, for the math symbols... if this actualy is the "T" chain, there should be lowercase letters as well...).
The Albrecht's labs/"1999" version of the Orokin writing font, from Warframe. The letter positions chosen for each character are based on the ARPABET-1 (single character per phoneme) standard. Guessed characters have a small mark to their upper left (most of the numerals are guessed).
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