A monospaced 3x5 font used in Vidora15 and later programmable electronic displays made by AMFA Cybernetics (formerly "ATMA Robotronics").
This font is made with AMFA encoding in mind. As such, the character set is very limited and there are no glyphs which require NKRO>1 or buckybits (Alt, Ctrl, Fn, Shift, Strg, option keys, etc). The glyphs normally present at these codepoints have been reverted so that any text displayed in this font is also effectively displayed in AMFA encoding. The encoding has 48 possible glyphs (including one which doubles as both "null" and "new line") so there are 96 glyphs in this font overall.
Hope this saves you some work, Feng! :^)
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Since this exact font and encoding scheme were used in other devices and software, some of which were (or had) games, I'm also tagging this with Game Recreations.
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Original size: 4pt (use multiples of this size for pixel perfection)
MIV: h6.24 @ 1x / m8.35 @ 1x
Version History:
1.3: Added more symbols.
1.2: Added Dutch and German.
1.1: Q* were corrected.
1.0: Initial release.
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Font used for rAIn, shipboard AI of the RGS-1 Rainbow Loop. This will also likely be used in FLAK materials, as well.
A vaguely Courierlike OSD (Onscreen Display) font which tries its best to be casual. The name is inspired by the old computer joke: "Who is General Failure and why is he reading my hard disk?"
No filters or faux-beziers, just stock bricks and a bit of stacking/nudging!
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More about the design:
It started as a doodle and an attempt to make a smooth, low-resolution, low-poly font, and then it became a Courierlike. I have other fonts that tried to do polygonal round shapes before this (such as Cartoon Riot) but this design is my first real success in this area.
Initially, I made the angled glyphs before the round ones. I didn't want to change the angled ones, so glyphs like C, O, and Q became a bit wider than they are tall. I'm quite fond of this, because in most designs these glyphs tend to have a tall and narrow character. I think the mildly squat look of this font makes it cuter and gives it more personality.
A lot of glyphs were altered in specific ways to look more like metal type, especially anything with diacritics which touch the letters themselves. Other glyphs were altered specifically to be interpretable at small size. I also use angled contours and actual round bricks alongside each other within the same glyphs, another technique which is geared toward style and interpretability at small size.
This font came with many new challenges and an array of new techniques had to be designed. Loops were an insurmountable challenge because of the low resolution and heavy line weight, so I drew rounded areas to suggest them. You can see it on letters like Greek γ, ζ, and ξ.
A recreation of the font used on LSD: Dream Emulator for the PlayStation 1 with extended characters.
NOTE # 1: The extended characters are made by myself.
NOTE # 2: Some of the characters aren't accurate to their respective original versions due to the limitations Fontstruct has at the date I am making this font.
I hope you understand.
I'm using "All Composites saved in MY BRICKS 3.0" by djnippa in this font to make some letters.
Feel free to publish your opinion of this font!
A VCR/camcorder-type pixel font. This is the vector version, which as far as I can tell looks the same except for some subtle differences in kerning and 2px higher line height.
Gitlab repo (contains FontForge source for the bitmap version)
This is the improved version of EAS Bulletin! Hope you like it!
This is a clone of EAS BulletinA VCR-like font that mimics the look of VCR OSDs.
NOTE: Click 'TrueType Font' when downloading!
This is a clone of Dusty Tapes Monoэто короче как vcr osd mono но лучше.
this font is like vcr osd mono but better.
This is a clone of 12x16 iskra(Credit to Paradigm The Great for the original typeface.)
This is the second font I've made so far and currently my "dream font", if such a thing like that exists.
I've never seen a typeface with a capital R, S, and number 4 like this one, as the only one I've come across by the beginning of August 2023 would be "Videotape", however even that would be misaligned and wonky. This font is the sequel to my first font, "Tracking Knobs", but with more glyphs and lowercase letters.
This is a clone of CHARGEN '92My first font attempt.
Based out of "Video Tape", this font emulates VCR bitmaps.
This is a clone of Video TapeA replication of the Panasonic Omnivision VCR bitmap. Now, that I have a Panasonic Omnivision VCR for myself, the model being a PV-V4520, I can make this font with ease and 100% accuracy.
This font is not entirely accurate. Please point out errors so I can fix them in the forseeing future.
This is a clone of VCRStereoCyrIn Logic, the Symbolic Dream.
This is a clone of NanakorobiYaoki-Little