Pixel font recreation based on every character that appears in the FIFA: Road to World Cup 98 game for the SNES.
The font is a 1:1 rebuild and appears exactly as in-game. I have also added a vast array of more common characters, diacritics, and other gylphs that don't show up in the game.
The base font size and recommended setting for RoadWC98 is 12pt and multiples of that. Use metric kerning and no additional smoothing effects for the ultimate pixel experience.
FIFA: Road to World Cup 98 on the SNES was developed by XYZ Productions and released by Electronic Arts in 1997.
~ RoadWC98 - created by Caveras after the original font used in FIFA: Road to World Cup 98 for the Super Nintendo. ~
Let's play dominoes! All 49 tiles in the basic set are here, from double-blank to double-6. (There is no good way to map these tiles onto alphanumerics, so you kind of have to hunt for a particular tile until you get to know where they are. The doubles are on the corresponding number keys; e.g., double-4 is on the 4 key. The remaining were mapped on a grid with sequential letters. Caps and lower case are inverse tiles; e.g., 5-3 is on the q key, while 3-5 is Q.) Enjoy!
It's the fancy cursive font from "resource2.dat" from Cube World. Turns out, its actually the 'Venice' font by Susan Kare & Bill Atkinson from the original classic Macintosh, so I've added all the remaining characters from the original font which the cube world version didn't have.
Cube World is Copyright 2010-2019 Picroma e.K.
Presenting Nintendo's Excitebike (aka. Vs. Excitebike), released in 1984 for the FC, NES and Arcade, and 1988 for the FDS. This was based on Excitebike Series. This font is a part of Nintendoid 1.
This is a clone of Nintendoid 1A non-pixelated font heavily inspired by the Cube World "resource1.dat" font. This font matches the character presentation from the Cube World alpha version. Hence, the star and filled circle do not appear in place of the plus-minus and registered trademark symbols, so it will look a little strange if used in the steam version.
I don't consider this version with lowercase characters to be really done yet, there's definitely a few things that still need work, and the Extended Latin-1 lowercase characters need to be finished out.
Version 20191031.b
This is a clone~ Altima - created by Caveras after the original main text font used in Final Fantasy Tactics for the Sony PlayStation. ~
Altima is not the first recreation of the original PSone Final Fantasy Tactics font on the web, but certainly the most accurate and comprehensive you'll find. The font is based on the complete set of the game's international bitmap glyphs and thus also features the Japanese hiragana and katakana alphabets as well as countless additional stuff like a cyrillic base character set, special characters, zodiac signs, and whatnot.
The base font size and recommended setting for Altima is 16pt and multiples of that. Use metric kerning and no additional smoothing effects for the ultimate FFT experience.
License Information: You are not allowed to use this font for any commercial purposes. If you wish to obtain a commercial license, please contact me via email: cava@caveras.net
Final Fantasy Tactics on the PlayStation was developed by Square and published by Square & Sony in 1997.
This stylish pixel font is a combined recreation of the original font appearing in the SNES brawler Kouryuu no Mimi and the font used for the inofficial English fan translation. Both fonts are very different in style, shape and measurements, but I mixed them together as there are no overlaps on any glyphs.
The character set of Kouryuu includes a vast array of additional diacritic variants (which do not appear in-game), number variations, bonus characters, unique glyphs, and also full sets of the Japanese hiragana and katakana alphabets and other Asian glyphs from the original Japanese version of the game. Every character that doesn't pop up in the game has been designed to match the look and feel of the base characters.
I recommend to use this one with font sizes that are multiple of 11pt and avoid any font smoothing or anti aliasing methods.
~ Kouryuu by Caveras - a font recreation based on original fonts from the SNES game Kouryuu no Mimi, developed and released by VAP in 1995. ~
This is a clone