This typeface design is a edited version of Pharoan Ultra Bold as it was heavy and bold which gave me more to do with it, the theme of the type is destruction.
I wanted to merge both Deconstructivism and Glitch Art into my typeface. By finalizing my idea I looked at how letters could be morphed by being pulled and pushed, what would it look like if the letter was to be dropped what shapes it could form - instead of taking parts away from it.
This was cloned from Kazuhito Morita's Computer System 5x20.
Please note that the remaining glyphs you see have been positioned to the left side. You may have to use FontForge before you can edit this font.
This is a clone of Computer System 5x20An alternate system font for the Virtual Gremlin, a software-based games prototyping system I wrote in 2016-2017. This font ended up never being used.
This was only able to be recovered due to the advent of a lucky screenshot which a friend posted online. The font was in a spritesheet which was being shown off, so I was able to FontStruct it!
Portable Vengeance in negative. A few glyphs (such as "Q") were truncated for the grid.
Rather than spacing this so the blocks form a continuous reel, as I usually do, I decided to let things be a bit spaced out. This makes the font much better at attracting attention. And, since this is made to show system messages in games and consoles, it works out!
The units are designated by the numbers 0 to 9 on the keypad.
The tens are designated by the keys from "a" to "i" (lower case).
The hundreds are designated by the keys from "j" to "r" (lower case).
The thousands are designated by the keys from "A" to "I" (capital letter).
This is a fictional numeric system that I'll use for my TRPG plays and in my world.
"Dot" = 0 | I = 1 | II = 2 | III = 3 | V = 4 | "V with strike" = 5 | "Inverted N" = 6 | "V with vertical line" = 7 | "Flipped V" = 8 | "Flipped V with strike" = 9 | + = 10 | X = 100 |
S = 1,000 | "Inverted E with +" = 10,000 (myriad) | "Inverted E with E" = 100,000,000 (myriad of myriad)
Font recreated from the Motorola WX160. Note that the Alcatel OT-V670 uses the same font as the display font.
Only the basic Latin glyphs are recreated as the Motorola W160 only supports:
- English
- Bahasa Melayu
- Bahasa Indonesia
This font is not a derivative of Alcatel OT-V670 created by ZEkA10000 (which is licensed under a FontStruct Non-Commercial License which prohibits derivatives), even if you say otherwise.
Moto Origin © Vienna Binders. All rights reserved.
Motorola, HELLOMOTO © Motorola.
The FontStructions that are created and/or made available on this Site are the copyrighted work, of the respective creator.