93462
Published: 13th December, 2014
Last edited: 14th December, 2014
Created: 13th December, 2014
A 3d-ish font based off of a 4x5 pixel font. Meant for logos. On the M , the V, the W, and the Q, I couldn't make the shape of the letter right, so I improvised and used different bricks.
90980
Published: 27th September, 2009
Last edited: 27th September, 2009
Created: 27th September, 2009
Clone of Rorrim. Same font flipped around to be normal.This is a clone of Rorrim
70980
Published: 27th September, 2009
Last edited: 27th September, 2009
Created: 25th September, 2009
It's a tiny backwards font. You can "siht ekil epyt" and look at it in a mirror. All letters are no bigger than 4x5 (execpt for the # sign, I could not make it work.) in hindsight, 4x5 was a poor choice.
5702061
Published: 30th May, 2009
Last edited: 18th June, 2009
Created: 30th May, 2009
Yet another 4x5 pixel font for use in low resolution applications.This is a clone of Tiny 3x5
272980
Published: 26th August, 2008
Last edited: 27th February, 2009
Created: 12th August, 2008
MikronH, part of Sah War's "Mikron" font family is a mix of tweaked wide capital glyphs from the Alegro7 Pro font(by the same author) with condensed cubic lowercase letters, forming a rather odd typeface for multiple "small-pixel-font-now!" needs. The special symbols are smaller.
*contains only "Basic Latin" glyphs(= Roman glyphs, capital & lowercase + symbols + numerals) for now.
P.S Enjoy, use and comment. Best used without AA at a suitable font size.
~by Sah War(a.k.a. sahwar)
290981
Published: 19th April, 2024
Last edited: 27th February, 2009
Created: 27th February, 2009
Clone of MikronH with rounded edges for the lowercase letters. Capital "G" & "Q" were changed a bit to fit better with the rest.
P.S. Cheers! I'm looking forward to making a HaxrCorp clone. ;)This is a clone of MikronH
13304321
Published: 19th April, 2024
Last edited: 3rd December, 2012
Created: 30th June, 2011
A small compact pixelated font 4 in width, 5 in height. Notice how hard to shrink to 4 in width letters like 'M' and 'W' somehow resemble the more complex versions of themselves.