The font used in Super Mario 64 when speaking to people or reading signs. These characters are mostly derived from the game and used to recreate the font. Glyphs such as the asterisk and curly bracket are made with modified or existing characters used in-game (star instead of asterisk, curly bracket made from parenthesis, etc.)
This is the font of Newer Super Mario Bros. DS, a romhack of New Super Mario Bros. Credits to the Newer Team for making the hack and the font that goes with it. The font's internal name is 2647 Delfino. Button, smilies and such are starting from DB80 instead of E000 in the in-game font.
It's no dream! A font based on Super Mario Bros. 2 is now available!
This is a clone of Super Mario Bros. NESVertical Resolution: 7
This font is a combination of Mario 1's font and that of Mario 3. The Japanese version has its own character set, which I plan to add to this font once I know the bitmaps. Also, I plan to modernise this font due to the low resolution. Please redownload if you wish to use the latest version.
This is a clone of Super Mario FontSuper 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.
A faithful recreation of the nostalgic 8-bit Nintendo Family Computer "Famicom" font with an IBM Code Page 437 character ROM-based twist. While it initially has 381 characters, I'll strive to work hard on this one.
The Famicom was released in Japan on 15 July 1983. It was released in the United States on 18 October 1985 as the Nintendo Entertainment System.
Note: The cap. letter J and cap. Cyrillic Je, is custom made for this font.
A reminder:
This is not a direct clone of this font (aptly named Super Mario Bros. NES) released on 18 October 2016, noting the creation date of this font below.
Downloading of font is disabled because of Nintendo and its anti-preserving tactics.
Kyrolan Font Family © Vienna Binders, Aaron Wolff. All rights reserved.
The FontStructions that are created and/or made available on this Site are the copyrighted work, of the respective creator.
This is a cloneA non-pixelation recreation of the nostalgic 8-bit Nintendo Family Computer "Famicom" font with an IBM Code Page 437 character ROM-based twist. While it initially has 381 characters, I'll strive to work hard on this one.
The Famicom was released in Japan on 15 July 1983. It was released in the United States on 18 October 1985 as the Nintendo Entertainment System.
Note: The cap. letter J and cap. Cyrillic Je, is custom made for this font. Following the events after this, here's one for you! Unfortunately, the Latin small letter æ ended up not working so "E6" for now.
One word about Nintendoid Non-Pixelated | FontStruct:
Shall I give you a crash course on how to non-pixelate this?
Downloading of font is disabled because of Nintendo and its anti-preserving tactics.
Kyrolan Font Family © Vienna Binders, Aaron Wolff. All rights reserved.
The FontStructions that are created and/or made available on this Site are the copyrighted work, of the respective creator.
This is a clone of KL One Pixel Single