Recreation of the small pixel font from Wadjeteye Games' "Technobabylon" (2015). http://www.wadjeteyegames.com/games/technobabylon/
Note the "Quanta" character (for the fictional in-game currency) is mapped to the "$" sign.
This font has been slightly expanded to include additional punctuation marks and special characters.
PC Font recreations: "Terminal" (Style 2, coding is CHINESE_BIG5)
This font only appears in Notepad, MS Paint and nowhere else, so replicating it might be a good idea.
The most amazing thing about this font is that it changes its style depending on the chosen font size. More styles and "More Latin" coming soon.
Here comes Terminal 8, the last entry in the Terminal font series.
Go check out the other Terminal fonts on my profile if you haven't!
NOTE: Click 'TrueType Font' when downloading!
Recreation of "Normal Centipede" from CPFONTS.FON, included in Microsoft Arcade from 1993.
The original font seems to have been intended to be capital letters and numbers only, with what appears to be poorly-resized bitmaps from a different font in the rest of the character set. Some, especially the punctuation, were literally illegible. So I hope you'll forgive me that this isn't a 100% faithful recreation.
Montfauçon is a serif pixel font recreation of the original main font from the PC graphic adventure Broken Sword: The Shadow of the Templars, also used in the sequel Broken Sword II: The Smoking Mirror.
The character set of Montfauçon includes a vast array of additional diacritic variants and bonus characters. Every character that doesn't pop up in the game has been designed to match the look and feel of the base characters.
I recommend to use this one with font sizes that are multiple of 17pt and avoid any font smoothing or anti aliasing methods.
~ Montfauçon by Caveras - a font recreation based on the original font from the PC game Broken Sword: The Shadow of the Templars, developed by Revolution Software and released by Virgin Interactive in 1996. ~
PC Font recreations: "Terminal" (Style 7, coding is OEM/DOS)
The final "Terminal" font style!
This font only appears in Notepad, MS Paint and nowhere else, so replicating it might be a good idea.
The most amazing thing about this font is that it changes its style depending on the chosen font size. "More Latin" (possibly) coming soon.
This font is a Serif font. It means that there a little hooks on the end of most characters, similar to the Times New Roman font. For more information, visit this Wikipedia article on the difference between Serif and Sans-Serif fonts.
Font specifications: Average character size: 8x5, largest character size: 11x5; 7x7, smallest character size: 1x1. Avaliable versions: Regular, Not avaliable (yet) versions: Bold, Italic, Italicised bold
Enjoy!
Inspired by DOS fonts. Conforms to an 8x14 monospace. Contains box drawing characters along with a lot of other random characters. I will continue to add more over time. Feel free to request a block if you really need it. If you find any errors or have suggestions, let me know those as well!
Recreation of the large pixel font from Wadjeteye Games' "Technobabylon" (2015). http://www.wadjeteyegames.com/games/technobabylon/
Note the "Quanta" character (for the fictional in-game currency) is mapped to the "$" sign.
This font has been slightly expanded to include additional punctuation marks and special characters.
Updated version, with thanks to James Dearden from http://www.technocratgames.com for providing a clean source reference font file.
PC Font recreations: "Terminal" (Style 4, coding is OEM/DOS)
This font only appears in Notepad, MS Paint and nowhere else, so replicating it might be a good idea.
The most amazing thing about this font is that it changes its style depending on the chosen font size. More styles and "More Latin" coming soon.
Computer System Primer is an educational-styled free font which spoofs Computer System 5×20. It is a font entirely made by me.
This is a clone of Computer System 5x20