THERE YOU GO, @bluemon . I DID THE BEST THAT I COULD WITH THE CYRILLIC (THE ONLY THING THAT I TOUCHED). I’M REALLY PROUD OF THE CAPITALS. MOST OF THE LOWER CASE IS OKAY, BUT A LOT OF LOWER-CASE CYRILLIC LETTERS HAVE THEIR OWN “SUB-X-HEIGHT” IF YOU KNOW WHAT I MEAN, SO THEY’RE BASICALLY JUST THE CAPITALS BUT SMALLER. THAT WAS QUITE HARD TO WORK AROUND, SINCE THAT FEATURE IS COMPLETELY NONEXISTANT IN THIS FONT (SEE YOUR LETTER: “s”). SO I’M NOT VERY HAPPY ABOUT “э”, AND KIND OF RESORTED TO THE HANDWRITTEN FORMS FOR: “в”, “д”, “з”, “и”, “й”, “у”, “ц”, “ш”, and “щ”. I DON’T KNOW, MAYBE @Dmitriy Sychiov (Sychoff) CAN POLISH IT OFF!
OH, AND I DIDN’T KERN ANYTHING, THERE’S A LITTLE PRESENT FOR YOU :D
This is a clone of IDKWIAARecreation of the pixel font used in the Sinclair ZX Spectrum (1982). Note the block element characters, set to their equivalent unicode points (U+2596 through to U+259F). Only the characters present in the computer's character set have been included.
Recreation of the pixel font from Universal's "Zero Hour" (1980). Very similar to "Cheeky Mouse" (1980), but with tweaked "M", "W", "X", "Z", "0" and copyright symbol. Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
This is a clone of Cheeky Mouse