HEY THIS ONE'S INACCURATE HERE'S A BETTER ONE
based on the logo of fancade: https://www.fancade.com
yes i know this sucks that's what i do
my goal was to creat the smallest font possible. so i decided to to take a 3x5 pixel grid for creating the font. but most special characters are a bit bigger. see also 3x5px fleisch for the none printing areas of this font http://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/3x5px_fleisch
if you want to use this font for commercial matters. get in contact with me. the commercial use of this font is bind to a donation to any children health care in your country. I want to see the transfer voucher of the donation.
PC Font recreations: "Terminal" (Style 3, coding is OEM/DOS)
This font only appears in Notepad, MS Paint and nowhere else, so replicating it might be a good idea.
The most amazing thing about this font is that it changes its style depending on the chosen font size. More styles and "More Latin" coming soon.
based on the logo of fancade: https://www.fancade.com
as well as the "insert disk" text on the main screen and martin magni's "hello world" game
work in progress
This is a clone of Fancade Logo Font3x5 pixel font
i think its mono
edit 2/10/24: no its not also i changed global spacing from 1.12 to 1
idk why it was on 1.12 but whatever
All letters and numbers are only 3x5 pixels (with the exception of 3 letters which are 5x5) making this the most pixely pixel font out there! Currently some symbols are supported, and more may be added in the future.
Recent changes to this font:
- I updated the font so it works better on the new spacing.
- I added a few symbols.
Based on a pixel pixel font I made a while back, trying to stick to the limitation of a fictional text rendering system* TL;DR 3x5 letter bodies with limited space for diacritics. Font is crisp at sizes multiple of 4.5**, really it's just a latin font but there's some experimental cyrillic, greek, and katakana which is kinda messy.
*Text would be rendered on a grid made up of alternating blank/diacritic lines (made of 3x2 boxes) and letter body lines (3x5 boxes). Each box is separated by 1 pixel in which glyphs cannot be drawn on. Diacritic boxes can be used to display a diacritic on either the letter above or below them; a limitation of this system is that this sharing of diacritic spaces could cause ambiguities.
**Weird number but that's how i got the line spacing I wanted. In the fictional system mentioned above, a technical limitation would be that the same slots are shared for diacritics above and below, causing them to overlap if a letter with a lower diacritic was on top of a letter with an upper diacritic.
Continuing on the theme of overzealously antialiased pixel fonts, here's a 3x5 no-wasted-matrix design. The shading enabled me to make many glyphs which normally need to be truncated or compressed (MWaemswz@«©»®, etc). Looks best at 2x Pixel size!
This gives me an "old newspaper" feeling and seems like the kind of font that would be used for the text of such newspapers in old adventure games.
Unfortunately, I could not get the shading effect to work in any graphics software except by turning antialiasing on, and this ruins the look. So if you want to render text in this font, I recommend going to View -> User Input, typing your text here on this page, and then screen capturing it...
Fairchild Channel F - PROPORTIONAL (font edition)
Video Entertainment System (VES - original name)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairchild_Channel_F
Collection of text characters, 1976-1981 Fairchild
5x5 / 4x5 / 3x5 US-ASCII valid fonts, 2018-04 dpla
Fairchild derived from the old 7-segment numerics.
Breakthroughs of this 2nd-gen video game console:
. first artificial intelligence (AI) in game,
. first programmable game cartridges (27),
. '8 colors' (in 102x58 out of 128x64 px),
. hold button menu, joystick/paddle controllers.
Today's young home players cannot understand this.
2018
0424
dpla.fr/fonts/channel-f-ves