A (kind of accurate) Undertale font for the Ciijan Alphabet (aka. a weird reskin of the english alphabet)
(Both Urvanian fonts are cloneable and downloadable.) Urvanian is an abugida-related language spoken by the Urvana (singular: Urvanum) in a galaxy approximately 3.2 billion light-years away. The derivation of the name "Urvanian" is the word "curve" (without the C), since the letters are mostly curves. Some letters resemble Latin letters (u, o, n, m, l, w). There are even a few diacritics (vowels)! The letters do not have any pronunciation at all. Even the smartest researchers out there couldn't find out how even the first letter is pronounced. Yet I have the full language (consonants, vowels, modifiers)!
Recreation of the pixel font from Quintet/Enix's "Terranigma" (1995) on the SNES.
This recreation has been slightly expanded to include additional accented characters that weren't in the German, Spanish, or French translation.
Beyond these, only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
UPDATE 4.0: updated, finished Vietnamese characters
Number of characters: 335 (or 336)
font = 100% free, can used in both personal use and commercial uses.
supports English and Vietnamese.
and the "More Latin" part in FontStruct.
uh it is now f-ed up with cs2.
The default font used by Adafruit's GFX library. The hex codes correspond to the cp437(true) chart on page 16:
https://cdn-learn.adafruit.com/downloads/pdf/adafruit-gfx-graphics-library.pdf
Hex codes with bit[0] = 0, 1, 8, 9 were unavailable, so bit[2] is set as 1.
(Ex: 0x0001 => 0x0101)
Recreation of the pixel font used in the Sinclair ZX Spectrum (1982). Note the block element characters, set to their equivalent unicode points (U+2596 through to U+259F). Only the characters present in the computer's character set have been included.
An attempt to make an esoteric form of Latin which is governed by the same amount and extent of structural logic as normal Latin. In other words, Latin that is weird, but makes sense while being as readable to the initiated as normal Latin is. It's a design that is weird in order to make itself easier to read, not harder.
This is a borderline IVO design, not because of its appearance, but because it sometimes requires the same set of visual considerations to interpret.
Note: I found the character for "U" was broken and the only way to fix it was to use another software. I'll stop rambling heres the fixed file: google drive