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Recreation of the monochromatic version of the pixel font from The Bitmap Brother's "Gods" (1991) on the Amiga and Atari ST.
This monochromatic version is used in game for notifications and status messages at the bottom of the screen, on a green gradient "ticker".
Only the characters used in the game have been included.
Recreation of the small pixel font from Brøderbund Software's "Shufflepuck Café" (1988) on the Amiga. The same font was used in the Atari ST and MS-DOS versions.
In the game, this font appears on the initial loading screen. It has been extended to include any missing uppercase and lowercase characters, and to provide some useful punctuation marks. The slightly odd spacing of some of the characters has been maintained.
Beyond that, only the characters used in the game have been included.
Recreation of the main pixel font from Brøderbund Software's "Shufflepuck Café" (1988) on the Amiga. The same font was used in the Atari ST and MS-DOS versions.
Extended to include any missing uppercase characters, and to provide some useful punctuation marks. One final tweak from the original is normalising the spacing of the lowercase "i" (which strangely had two pixels of spacing instead of one). The odd "j" which is one pixel taller than the "i" is retained.
Beyond that, only the characters used in the game have been included.
Based on Anypix 7x5 Unicode.
Done:
Basic Latin, More Latin, Extended Latin A, Extended Latin B, Greek and Coptic, Cyrillic, Arabic, Devanagari, Hebrew, Katakana, Thai, Georgian, Armenian, Bopomofo, Hiragana, Bengali, Gurmukhi, Gujarati, Sinhala, Even More Latin, Google Fonts Basic
Working on:
Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam
(The reason why I am not doing Hangul is because 7x7 is too small for most of the letters. Once I get around to VCR-14, I will do Hangul and (hopefully) the rest of Plane 0.)
Trying my best to make the "System" font from memory, hence the name "System Memory".
NOTE: Click "TrueType Font" when downloading!
This is a clone of System MemoryThis was cloned from Kazuhito Morita's Computer System 5x20.
Please note that the remaining glyphs you see have been positioned to the left side. You may have to use FontForge before you can edit this font.
This is a clone of Computer System 5x20Global spacing version of Terminal 2.
NOTE: Click "TrueType Font" when downloading!
This is a clone of Terminal 2 MonoGlobal spacing version of Terminal 1.
NOTE: Click "TrueType Font" when downloading!
This is a clone of Terminal 1 MonoA font I intend to use for a personal project of mine, should it ever come to fruition. I just, uh...got so caught up in the euphoria of designing a typeface that I forgot I lived in a world where the passage of time exists. Also I won't even need all these characters, I just know that (as long as my project doesn't flop) there'll inevitably be a person like me who'll go on a hunt for the font and will be disappointed if there's not a full alphabet available. *coughHALFLIFE2coughPORTAL2cough*
Sorry, I must have gotten a frog stuck in my throat.
ANYWAY, I've never actually made a font before (except once with my handwriting, though that file is gone with the wind), so any pointers are appreciated! :D
(I'll probably be adding characters for a while yet, so if you see there's one missing for your language of choice, feel free to lmk so I can get that in here!)
Oh, no, the bricks got jumbled D:<
It's been a year since I've created "Fixedsys 2 Monospaced." It's the most downloaded font on my account, with more than 500 downloads.
To celebrate these achievements, allow me to introduce the new Fixedsys--reFixedsys.
Directly re-created from the image in the Wikipedia page, it'll be the best Fixedsys font you'll ever see and use. Enjoy.
NOTE: Click 'TrueType Font' when downloading!
This is a clone of reFixedsys MonoIt's been a year since I've created "Fixedsys 2 Monospaced." It's the most downloaded font on my account, with more than 500 downloads.
To celebrate these achievements, allow me to introduce the new Fixedsys--reFixedsys.
Directly re-created from the image in the Wikipedia page, it'll be the best Fixedsys font you'll ever see and use. Enjoy.
NOTE: Click 'TrueType Font' when downloading!
This is version 6.1.0 of Unicode D, which now supports more Cyrillic supplements, Latin-B supplements, and Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols (they can't appear on any site, but you can download it just for free!).
Just issued on July 10th, 2020.
This is a clone of Unicode 5.0 (Unicode D Pre-Release)This is the current OS/2 Orca font which took inspiration from MS Sans Serif.
First established in January 16th, 1997.
This is a clone of OS2 Orca Pixel 2The Unicode bitmap font from Minecraft, also known as GNU Unifont. The game has a font priority system called "providers" that looks for bitmap data for a specific character in the non-Latin European character set first, then in the accented Latin character set, then in the game's low-res default font, then finally here, in the high-res Unicode character set. You can override this priority system by going into Options... > Language..., then setting "Force Unicode Font" to ON.
The game stores this font in images containing 16 rows and 16 columns of characters. Each character is 16 pixels wide and 16 pixels tall, totalling 256 characters per image. Each image represents one Unicode codepage, and there are 256 pages, which covers characters U+0000 to U+FFFF. Control characters and most CJK characters are omitted here, because FontStruct doesn't officially support them.
The font is not monospace, however, so the effective widths of each character are stored in a separate file called glyph_sizes.bin. Information for each character is stored in one byte, and the upper and lower 4 bits of this byte represent the start column and end column with a number ranging from 0 to 15, where 0 is the leftmost column of the character's allotted 16x16 space, and 15 is the rightmost column, respectively.
Knowing all of this allowed me to automate most of the steps involved in creating this recreation. I did not use the FontStructor to make this, I instead used a program to directly interact with FontStruct's API. It is possible to add unsupported characters to a font with this method, but I chose to stay within the limits of what is officially supported.
This is the first font I ever made since I obtained its first debut on January 25th, 2019. As you might have guessed, this is Computer System 5x20, but only the font you see has its size of 48 pixels.
I have also used Combining Diacritical Marks for this type of unicode only because not only it works with combining a diacritical mark into this letter, it can also be used for international/worldwide purposes.