It's no dream! A font based on Super Mario Bros. 2 is now available!
This is a clone of Super Mario Bros. NESIn-Game font from Dan Dare I on the Sinclair ZX Spectrum.
This is a clone of Dan Dare IIAn accurate re-rendition of the 'resource1.dat' font from Cube World. All of the 'pixels' of the font are made up of 5x5 patterns. (Well, for every character except the star, which uses a different 2x2 pattern.) This font follows the exact original ordering of characters from the alpha, but also puts the steam release star and filled circle at their correct unicode offsets.
Version 20190923.a
Cube World is Copyright 2010-2019 Picroma e.K.
If the copyright holders of Cube World wish this font to be removed from Fontstruct, please leave a note and I will remove it ASAP.
An unbelievable hole-in-one! A font based on NES Open Tournament Golf is now available to use!
This is a clone of Super Mario Bros. NESTOUCHDOWN! A font based on Tecmo Bowl is now available!
This is a clone of Super Mario Bros. NESNo Konami code is required for the usage of this font. You may not get 30 lives with this font inspired by Konami's Contra series, but this will be a font you'll enjoy using, retro gaming fans! Enjoy!
This is a clone of Super Mario Bros. NESDecided to remake this font using composite bricks and additional characters
This is a clone of PlaneptuneFont used for the text of Poodle Caboodle Anthology, a compilation of short stories I wrote for the games Seven Candles, Trap Farmer Brer Brah, and Naively.
In this font the principles which I associate with "bookishness" are taken nearly to their logical end. This font is so bookish, it sometimes looks like a scaled-down, aliased version of a high-resolution font. It embraces its flaws in a highly methodical way which helps it cohere. It's also designed with speedreading in mind - something you can see in the simple curves of letters like aefgjrsy.
Recreation of the in-battle font from Pokémon Black/White/Black 2/White 2, complete with the Pokédollar sign in place of $ and the PK and MN in place of registered sign and trademark sign respectively. (The regular font from these games already exists elsewhere, called Power Clear.) I also added all kinds of accents (but none of the emojis).
Font from the ingame marquee display of Barcade Brawl, a 2015 game by yours truly. This was made to look similar to the system fonts from old arcade boards, PC microsystems, etc. You've probably seen the fonts I'm talking about; they're everywhere and many people refer to them singularly as "the arcade font" or "the NES font".
This is 7x7 with no wasted matrix, but it looks better without monospacing since not every glyph is the same width. It also makes a decent terminal & chat font, at least for those who don't care about the case of the messages they read and write.
Feel free to use this in your games, etc.!
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Original size: 5.25pt (use multiples of this size for pixel perfection)
A monospaced 3x5 font used in Vidora15 and later programmable electronic displays made by AMFA Cybernetics (formerly "ATMA Robotronics").
This font is made with AMFA encoding in mind. As such, the character set is very limited and there are no glyphs which require NKRO>1 or buckybits (Alt, Ctrl, Fn, Shift, Strg, option keys, etc). The glyphs normally present at these codepoints have been reverted so that any text displayed in this font is also effectively displayed in AMFA encoding. The encoding has 48 possible glyphs (including one which doubles as both "null" and "new line") so there are 96 glyphs in this font overall.
Hope this saves you some work, Feng! :^)
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Since this exact font and encoding scheme were used in other devices and software, some of which were (or had) games, I'm also tagging this with Game Recreations.
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Original size: 4pt (use multiples of this size for pixel perfection)
MIV: h6.24 @ 1x / m8.35 @ 1x
Written language of the Skalmish, people within my simulation ESOSVM. These were the people initially used to colonize the universe "Rskalmwayt" wherein several stories take place, including Dheen's Folly and Trap Farmer Brer Brah. 5132 random selections were taken from Oinai stock and placed on Planet Fyromr, and their descendants became the Fyromrese. Tandem AIs then began to refine and alter remnants of Unified Oinai language into this.
Glyphs of this style can be seen on cave walls, objects, signs, records, etc. dating up to the time when I began to intervene in the workings of the Rskalmwayt simulation (ESOSVM Canonical Year 16573440000). They were always pixel art - no high-res renditions of these shapes were ever created, so there's ample room for reinterpretation.
Like most Runic languages (including Elder Futhark), these glyphs have a specific ordering associated with them. Additionally, in written Skalmish the glyphs which make up a word are always written in alphabetical order. Glyphs have no associated sound components. They were used to record gestural communications, so there's no way to speak them. Had this language been spoken, however, it probably would have used a priority-based system wherein certain glyphs were pronounced before others or preferentially stressed. Kind of like Thai language, but way more convoluted.