A 3x3 microfont from the Virtual Gremlin, an old game of mine. This is designed to look tiny and indistinct. Useful when writing jargon, placeholder text, or technobabble (the kind of meaningless information you'd write when drawing a newspaper or computer terminal).
VERSION HISTORY:
08 Feb 2018 - v1.0 declared finished.
Small 3 pixel font which is probably the smallest you can ever make a font and still be readable (barely). Some of the characters such as S and Z almost look lokercase while one of the characters N is lowercase to differentiate from H and M.
Size: 3x3 (square)
Making a pixel font series. I tried to make the smallest font posible and it looks ok, especially when viewed at smallest size.
Things that don't look good: (G, 8, @, ß, €, #, %)
- G (upper + lower case) looks like a weird C
- 8, @ are just black squares
- ß, €, #, % just don't resemble (Hey! At least I tried!)
An even more condensed variant of CG pixel 4x5, this is just about as small as a B&W pixel font can get. This is the monospace version of the font.
This is a clone of CG pixel 3x5An even more condensed variant of CG pixel 4x5, this is just about as small as a B&W pixel font can get. This is the variable-width version of the font.
This is a clone of CG pixel 4x5A tiny but surprisingly legible 4x5 pixel font originally designed for a "code golf" competition. Includes all printable ASCII characters (with identical lowercase and uppercase letters). This is the monospace version of the font.
This is a clone of CG pixel 4x5A tiny but surprisingly legible 4x5 pixel font originally designed for a "code golf" competition. Includes all printable ASCII characters (with identical lowercase and uppercase letters). This version has proportional spacing, so not all characters have the same width.