A font reminiscent of old DOS VGA text, designed to scale nicely. I wanted that 'look' of fonts like "Perfect DOS VGA 437" without the pixelation at higher scales. I'm happy with the results, so far. Updated with more characters and punctuation.
A strong, clear, fixed-width console font inspired by 1980s Acorn microcomputer text, but much smoother. Good for coding, text editing and text interfaces. Contains all glyphs for single byte values in CP-437 (DOS:US), CP-850 (DOS:EU) and CP-1252 (Windows).
I am aiming for the largest useful character count of any non-pixellated monospaced console font, so check back here every few months. If there are any unicode subsets that you need completing, just ask.
NOTE: If you want to get this font working in Windows 10 Command Prompt & PowerShell, please read the Jan 2019 comments below.
This is a cloneThis is another clone of Monkey (my monospace lanky font); it should be very similar to the original except for the lower x-height and the added accented characters (More Latin/Latin-1, Latin Extended A, Latin Extended B, and now Even More Latin/Latin Extended Additional). It is 16 blocks tall and 6 blocks wide; all letters without diacritics are at most 9 above the baseline and at most 3 below, but the accents push the height of a letter up by 3 blocks (or rarely 4), and the box drawing characters extend even higher, to 16 blocks from descender to the highest point. This font uses the FontStruct 2x2 filter method with plenty of composite and stacked bricks, which lets the curves look good at large sizes while remaining sharp on the screen at normal sizes. Mandrill will look strange in the FontStruct preview if you zoom in or out, but if you download it, it will look sharp at size 16 or 12 (depending on the program).
This is a clone of Monkey