Also found this on CSDB, called Foldfont. Meant to look like folded paper. This could be a great colour font, but I'm cheap and only have a free account, so you're getting it in black and white. Still, it looks pretty good when enlarged so it's perfect for headings. Enjoy.
Fives is now smooth. A bit uneven but I was tired of fiddling with composite bricks and other things that have a mind of their own.
This is a clone of Fives PixeledWizard of Wor. I noticed it had an interesting double-height font on the Commodore 64, where letters are combinations of a top and bottom half. I've fudged things a bit to fill the bog-standard ASCII set.
I've added the six character sprites, facing left and right. Here's how to generate them.
Burwor: Alt-0161 and Alt-0171
Garwor: Alt-0162 and Alt-0172
Thorwor: Alt-0163 and Alt-0173
Worrior (Player): Alt-0164 and Alt-0174
Worluk: Alt-0165 and Alt-0175
Wizard of Wor: Alt-0166 and Alt-0176
Character set from Impossible Mission loading screen on the Commodore 64. Original contained glyphs for A-Z capitals and digits 1984 only.
Have used some of the angular blocks to create smoother characters, while using the original pixelled versions for lower case. This could do with some extra work to improve it, if anyone else wants to have a go then feel free to clone it :)
This is a clone8-bit rendition of "Broderbund Software" ripped by http://kofler.at - represents the logo text but not sure what game it's from. Made this proportional and created some punctuation glyphs to fill it out. No descenders in the style of the original.
For info about Broderbund the company, read https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broderbund
Font used in 10th Frame (and the Leaderboard Golf series) for the Commodore 64 by Access Software. I used 10th Frame's smaller lettering for lower case, and the box score numbers for an alternate set of digits (use Shift 1-8, [ and ] for these). The letters used shading (grey pixels next to the black ones) so I've tried to mock that.
Super Mario Abyss is based on "Super Mario Bros by Abyss", a hacked version of Great Giana Sisters for Commodore 64. The game had its own character set, here, with a few additions. Its faux italics make for a good scrawl.
Visitors is taken from 'V' - The Video Game, based on the 'V' TV series of the early 1980s. Yeah, the one with the lizard people infiltrating humanity, that's it. I put in some angle parts because I didn't want the M and W to look like deformed Hs. Might just add extra "columns" in the glyphs to keep it pixellised. This is the whole character set, plus a few extra characters to build your own pulse line. Have fun
Another Commodore character set. From Summer Games II's Fencing event, this is the font that appears on the computer terminal. Upper case, digits and full stop only. It's also correctly monospaced as the terminal is meant to be an early 1980s machine. G and Q will touch adjacent characters, that's by design.
Fell back on this as I want to work with curves BUT they're kind of limited. I work in 1x1 pixel space but I want a curve that can span a 2x2 space. At the moment Fontstruct doesn't let us scale a brick up in size, only downward (i.e. composite bricks)... so the only curves you can do, your letters look like rounded rectangles.
Fives. I had a 5x5 pixel font amongst my source material so I made it into a font. Everything is based on a 5x5 grid. Next level of this will be to use the shaped blocks to improve the curves and slopes and just make it a really small font.
Flints is a font from GEOS FontPack PLUS on the Commodore 64.
Odd backward-leaning characters. Kerning not quite right in places, any suggestions welcome. I deliberate made the spacing 1 pixel looser than default, to try and match the original's feel.
Yet another GEOS font! This is a recreation of Venetian from FontPack PLUS, which was a 24-point font. It had its own inherent imperfections, some of them I fixed, others I haven't... decide for yourself if it's good or not. I haven't kerned anything either. Spacing was 4 pixels between characters in the original.
And why the name? Venetian blinds! I decided not to rename it "Venice" here because there's other fonts with that name.
Triad published by Livewire. One of the first games I ever played on the C64 back in 1985, loaded this up off tape - probably the first game I ever mastered and advanced through the levels. And the first place I ever heard Bach's Toccata and Fugue in D Minor :)
LED lettering used by PTV (Public Transport Victoria) on the SmartBus boards for "how long until the next bus" information. I ride the bus to work each day, so these are pretty familiar, but I still had to guess some of them. I've left out some glyphs where they're just not useful (e.g. comma or quotation marks).
Spook, part of GEOS FontPack PLUS.
There's a lot of horror and Hallowe'en themed fonts out there... here's another to join the plethora. I liked this one back in the day for its adornment with bats, but when recreating it here in FontStruct I got an appreciation for how the pixels are randomly missing and look like a mummy's tattered rags.
The original didn't have much punctuation, I've added very little here - mainly quote marks and a dollar sign. It'll be good for headlines and banners though, if you don't mind the pixellation :)
Next trick will be to make a glyph of the Ghostbusters logo to go into it, like I did with the Font Editor many years ago...