A set of 8x8 gradients in two styles. Capital letters (and some punctuation) use squares, and lowercase (and some punctuation) use circles for more smooth transitions.
Some characters connect together. Only uses Basic Latin.
BASED ON THE CASIO fx-9750GII MODEL.
CONTAINS EVERY CHARACTER AVAILABLE ON THE CASIO fx-9750GII, EXCEPT FOR A FEW SYMBOLS THAT I COULDN'T FIND THE CORRESPONDING UNICODE CHARACTER FOR.
GO TO https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vtTHWoddgk
TO SEE MY SPACEZAP TRAILER THAT I MADE WITH THIS FONT!
CLICK ON THE LINK IN THE DESCRIPTION TO DOWNLOAD THE GAME FOR DESKTOP.
CHANGELOG
• 2017:12:29 — FIRST RELEASE WITH FOUR HUNDRED AND FIFTY-EIGHT CHARACTERS.
• 2018:01:06 — ADDED TEN CHARACTERS WITH THE HELP OF dpla AND TCWhite BRINGING THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF CHARACTERS TO FOUR HUNDRED AND SIXTY-EIGHT.
• 2018:01:08 — CHANGED THE “○” CHARACTER FROM 25E6 TO 25CB.
JUST A SIMPLE 3×5 PIXEL FONT. THE CAPITALS HAVE A WHITE STRIKETHROUGH.
CHANGELOG
• 2017:03:10 — FIRST RELEASE.
• 2017:12:17 — ADDED QUITE A LOT MORE LATIN CHARACTERS, BRINGING THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF CHARACTERS TO SEVEN HUNDRED AND EIGHTY-SEVEN.
• 2017:12:18 — ADDED TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY-FOUR CYRILLIC CHARACTERS, BRINGING THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF CHARACTERS TO A THOUSAND AND FORTY-ONE.
• 2017:12:20 — ADDED FIFTY ARABIC CHARACTERS, BRINGING THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF CHARACTERS TO A THOUSAND AND NINETY-ONE.
• 2018:01:05 — UPDATED THE CYRILLIC “И” AND “Й.”
• 2018:01:06 — ADDED TWO HUNDRED AND SIXTY-SIX GREEK AND COPTIC CHARACTERS, BRAILLE AND OTHER SYMBOLS, BRINGING THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF CHARACTERS TO 1357. ALSO UPDATED THE CYRILLIC “Й.”
Not a font but a fast way of getting a whole word written with the touch of one single keyboard key.
CHRISTMAS / YULE in several languages, using the Latin alphabet. Ideal for use in play groups etc. Great for printing, cutting out and then decorating the letters ;)
French
German
Dutch
Danish/Swedish/Norwegian
Spanish
Welsh
English
Hungarian
Portugese; Gujarati, Marathi, Indonesian
Finnish
Maori
Italian, Corsican
Breton
Greek
Icelandic
Hindi
Sanskrit
Irish, Gaelig
Japanese
Esperanto
Latin
Turkish
Scots
Recreation of the pixel font from VEB Polytechnik's "Poly-Play" (1985), an old arcade machine from the former GDR. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly_Play
Note the strangely cut off "?", "j", "g" (indistinguishable from "q") and round brackets.
This recreation uses "Upper half block" (U+2580) for what would be a (non-standard) "Upper one quarter block"), the "Lower one eighth block" (U+2581) to "Full block" (U+2588) sequence of block elements, "Light shade" (U+2591) for the diagonal pattern, "Medium shade" (U+2592), and "Dark shade" (U+2593) for the vertical pattern.
Individual games use some custom symbols which don't map easily to unicode and have not been included.
Recreation of the pixel font from Cave's "Espgaluda" (2003), reused in "Espgaluda II" (2005) and "Deathsmiles" (2007). Note that the spacing for the "}" was amended for greater consistency. Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.