Puzzle font based on a short autosteganographic puzzle I made by the same name.
Each character is made from combining 12 different kinds of bars atop each other with the encoded form displaying them sparately, adding a diacritic when meant to be placed below the previous character.
Lowercase and 1234567890 is encoded form as displayed in the original puzzle,
uppercase and !"#¤%&/()= is decoded form showing what the symbols should look like when the puzzle font is reassembled correctly.
Feel free to suggest a better way to assign the "uppercase numbers".
Made the font in around 7-8 minutes. Based on the decoder I made a few hours ago.
When making a word, make sure it is all uppercase, except for the ending letter, which would be lowercase (e.g. "bananas" would become "BANANAs").
Alternate number set in a similar fashion in the Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms block.
Fixed the spacing
This is a clone of rede tupsdizgbiofskorsghIncludes most of Basic Latin. Used nudging to make the lowercase letters a, e, s, and z, and number 0. Used composites to make the non-smart quotation marks. Used stacking for some areas. Had trouble making lowercase k, but happy with the design for now.
"Our earth is only one polka dot among a million stars in the cosmos. Polka dots are a way to infinity. When we obliterate nature and our bodies with polka dots, we become part of the unity of our environment" - Yayoi Kusama
Polka took inspiration from Yayoi Kusama by using dots to create this typeface.
Recreation of the pixel font from Nihon Bussan/Nichibutsu's "Formation Armed F" (1988).
This recreation uses the special TTF+SVG format, which currently has limited support. For a monochrome version, see this recreation.
Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
This is a clone of Formation Armed FRecreation of the pixel font from Konami's "Pandora's Palace" (1984).
Fairly standard, but note the interesting details on "g", "j", and "2".
Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
Presenting Capcom's 1943: The Battle of the Midway (aka. 1944, or 1943: The Battle of Valhalla), released in 1987 for the Arcade, and 1988 for the FC/NES. Those letters are similar to Gun.Smoke. Thus, it made a mistake because it supposed to be The Battle of midway, released in 1942 in movies.