This is an Orlando recreation of the 2010-2011 Star Tours ride.**
*This originally took place on October 2010 before renovation was being put in place on May/June 2011.
*NOTE: This is just a fictional recreation, and it is in no way intended to be in real-life.
This one was most widely used on some macOS-inspired computers and laptops, but only with the least oldest and newest versions are to date.
Hint: The military-inspired font which I created just now has slight changes, even now the font looks rounded and sleek compared to the almost-squared font.
This is a clone of VirtualOrange Sengbar Pixel fontThis font is entirely made by me.
This is a clone of WillowOS Pixel 8 CompThis font is entirely made by me.
This is a clone of WillowOS Pixel 7 CompThis font is entirely made by me.
This is a clone of WillowOS Pixel 7 CompThis font is entirely made by me.
This is a clone of WillowOS Pixel 7 CompThis font is entirely made by me.
This is a clone of Unicode 2.0 (Latin Glyphs)The new version of the E230 series has some accurate LCD numbering, although the original font (Unicode 2.0) is cloned by Yoshigahara Kunihisa.
Its new arrival was first re-issued in July 17th, 2019 and is now manageable throughout August 22nd, 2020 to the present.
This is a clone of Unicode 2.0 (Latin Glyphs)There are some major changes to the new LCD font before the re-arrival of the new JR E230 series. Currently, this new LCD font was only viewable in all stations excluding a 2018 JR E234 bullet train (or Shinkansen).
But this was just introduced in June 20th, 2018, and is viewable to the public.
This is a clone of E234 New LCD 2017This new version came right after the old LCD version of the E230.
This consists of a new margin between the main and standalone branches persiding all JR stations.
This is a clone of Log Sys MegatrendsThis is pretty similar to Small Fonts, with a twist of MS Sans Serif and CEEFAX Teletext 2. Notice that it is not pretty much compared to Unicode 4.5. This was reissued no later than August 23rd, 1997.
During the mid-80s to the 1990s, the BBC Crew had to copy the same teletext/closed-captioning direct from the UK, but throughout the Americas, other local TV stations decided to broadcast a newspaper-styled page, although it doesn't appear to look like MS Sans Serif from the same computer in 1994. CEEFAX Teletext 3 was then launced in December 27th, 1989 and was reissued no more than April 14th, 1995.
The CEEFAX Bulletin consists of uppercase letters only.
Throughout early March 1998, in the UK, many CEEFAX pages have been updated, but in the US, when they show more pages, it recovers the same teletext style as mentioned in the UK.
The best for last Unicode D Release. It was then created on November 17th, 2020.
This is a clone of Unicode 4.5 (Unicode C Beta)The Log Sys Megatrends version doesn't resemble the Perfect DOS/Classic Console age of the American Megatrends BIOS, but it's perfect for BIOS information.
Log Sys Megatrends 2 resembles the recent Log Sys Alt, but this version has more than different numbers.
This is a clone of Log Sys MegatrendsCloser to Unicode 2.0, which it has the Latin glyphs.
It kind of has a phone-to-digital feel, and that the font is quite a good resemblance to Log Sys 1 Alt.
This is a clone of Unicode 2.0 (Latin Glyphs)This font was originally cloned from Unicode 2.0, which it has the Latin glyphs.
It wasn't made to display it by phones, but there's more than a deal for this existing font. The phone-to-computer age doesn't die yet!
This is a clone of Unicode 2.0 (Latin Glyphs)It's quite not the same version as Unicodes 2.0, 3.0 and 4.5, but it's pretty obvious that this font has a sleek and bold feeling to it.
It might probably become one of the most popular pixelated fonts in the computer age.
This is a clone of Log Sys 1 AltThe alternate version of the current font which is prone/ immune to coding.
Much like Unicodes 2.0, 3.0 and 4.5, it all has the same style along to our computer age.
It may seem that this font is developed for coding, but the further improvements for this font have clearly been updated.
This is a clone of Log Sys 1The ultimate edition to System 2019.
Mostly seen throughout The Final Minutes' YouTube channel, but retained Hiragana-Katakana symbols.
This is a clone of Unicode 4.5 (Unicode C Beta)