This is an expansion of the GUI/Menu font used in the 16-bit Earthbound games (Earthbound; Mother 3). This is usually referred to as the Apple Kid font, according to EarthBound Central.
The expansion is based off of Noto Sans by Google, as the font contains a majority of the Unicode glyphs, some of which are shown as □ in the FontStructor and many other fonts; that means that there are glyphs hiding in those □'s!
4/30/2024: EMOJI IS NOW IN BETA! I am now a FontStruct Patron, so I can add color to my font. While the main font is monochrome, I will be adding some EarthBound-themed emojis (limited to 8 colors)! Stay tuned!
1:1 pixel size is 12 size font.
The majority of all Unicode glyphs will be added soon.
Currently a work in progress. Expect some changes here and there occasionally.
Kinda wide and cool looking font that was meant for a hex editor. I decided to practice my pixel art skills and add some symbols for writing big numbers, as well as an italic number set loosely based on my own handwriting.
Inspired by Igiari.
Heathcliff Helvetica is a similar match between Helvetica and Neue Haas Grotesk. Same similar style than Helvetica, but a different trait than Morita Casual 2.
This is a clone of Heathcliff HelveticaMorita Casual 2 is the second installment of the now Morita Casual series. The second version of Morita Casual also identifies the handwriting made entirely by Kazuhito Morita, a sibling of Jōkichi Morita. This font pack was later reissued and installed to the public and media by January 25th, 2003.
Morita Casual is a perplexive, handwritten font that was once published through other MS-DOS games, but did not obtain an example of "Ready to Read with Pooh", since it is not yet still restored by the DOS system. Morita Casual may refer to Jōkichi or Kazuhito Morita's handwriting, but it cannot be reflected to Tolman, which is from Berkeley Softworks (1985), containing the GEOS FontPack 1 (C64 version). No similarities within this font is questioned.
Finished! (Took me 3 days)
Private use characters are encoded in Variation Selectors and Latin Ext. D.
(Inspied by The TI-92 Font)