everything on your keyboard is monospace, 5x9 pixels. some special unicode characters are two spaces wide though, so the font is not entirely monospace. there are no characters that are not either six or twelve pixels wide (including spacing)
This is a dot-matrix version of a very popular classic computer!
This is a clone of Apple 2b Dot-MatrixThis is a thick dot-matrix version of a very popular classic computer (fixing 1 pixel wider than the original), and it's normally used on word processors, electric billboards, etc. Probably a great font! Update: I just updated to the better, thick dots for all letters and symbols.
This is a clone of Apple 2b Dot-MatrixThis is a version of a very popular classic computer with scanlines! This font mimics the CRT display.
This is a clone of Apple 2a Dot-MatrixRecreated character set of the Brother EP-20/22 Electronic Thermal Typewriter (1983).
Square-pixel variation also available.
Square-pixel variation of the dot-matrix original.
This is a clone of Brother EP-20/22 Electronic TypewriterMorita 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.
Morita 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.