IMPROVED NICK DISPLAY ARCADE FONT! Free to use!
This is a clone of Nick Display ArcadeI can't believe this is taken from so many typefaces published here; I could have created this typeface from scratch, but it's overly time-consuming for me to do that, so I'm just doing minor adjustments for the moment. (Now the design of the capital "A" is adjusted once again, so it looks more like the one in the original Sonic 2.)
Anyways, I have enjoyed Sonic the Hedgehog 2 for years and I'm somewhat fastidious about its font design, so the minor adjustments I have made is just to make it more accurate, and more typical of the original Sonic 2 -- very suitable for game subtitles in general, I guess.
One more thing, I just finished adjusting the "More Latin" section in this typeface, so this is the final draft.
This is a clone of Sonic The Hedgehog 2 HUD FontSeen On Sonic 1, 2, And 3. Credit To SEGA.
This is a clone of Sonic SmallThe Life HUD Font As Shown In Sonic 1.
Middle Dot: ~
Arrows: #, $, %, &
This is the alien language used in the Guardians of the Galaxy - Mission: Breakout ride at the Disneyland Resort's California Adventure park. I used signs containing this language and its English translation to decode the symbols. NOTICE: No symbol for 'Q' or 'Z' have been found yet, but this font will be updated when they are.
UPDATE 8/20/17: I have found the symbol for 'Z' and the apostrophe and have updated the font accordingly!
UPDATE 2 - 8/20/17: After doing a bit of deciphering of the map you find in the photo viewing room, I have finally found the symbol for 'Q'!
I tried to make it as accurate to Undertale/Deltarune as I could, while attempting to strike balance with the original 8bitoperator JVE font by Jayvee Enaguas. Also contains additional accents, including capital eszett (ẞ).
The "TFX" stands for Toby Fox, because of course it does.
Click here for the variable width version.
UPDATE 7 Mar '22: Added infinity symbol (requires two whitespace after its input to display correctly).
UPDATE 24 Feb '22: All of Latin Extended-A and basic Cyrillic added, and some characters' spacing tweaked for accuracy.
UPDATE 29 Jan '22: More faulty kerning pairs removed.
This is a clone of 8BitOperator JVE (Undertale Dialogue Font)Painstakingly redone from movie screenshots.
Characters guessed: b j q x z " ! @ _ $ + ; [ \ ] ` ~
The ^ caret character is an upward pointing arrow, and is shown in the movie. This is correct based on the old ASCII-1963 standard, where ^ and _ were an upward and leftward pointing arrow, respectively.
I don't believe this font actually matches any specific contemporary terminal from the mid 70s to early 80s, I believe it was done custom for the movie. It is clearly inspired by the character set from several terminals.
One notable feature of the font (shared with several CRT terminals in the 1970s and 1980s) is that no more than 8 adjacent vertical rows within the 7*x10 character cell can be active at any given point. The 'block cursor' violates this, but the circuitry to display that was separate from the circuitry to read the character ROM and shift it vertically.
* Technically the character is 8 pixels wide, but if the 8th/leftmost pixel is set, it will apparently also appear as the rightmost '9th' pixel in the inter-character column, which is undesirable.This can be seen in the custom character set in the movie used for the country outlines during the "UNITED STATES" "SOVIET UNION" "WHICH SIDE DO YOU WANT?" scene. (Either that, or this was an accidental error during creation of those custom characters for the movie.)
The movie also often uses an "overline" character in order to underline the row above, and this occupies an entire row of characters on screen when this happens. Is this the true 'shape' of the underline character?
This is a clone of WOPR Terminal