Recreation of the pixel font from Taito's "Xyzolog" (1985) on the MSX. Note the special "L" (mapped to lowercase "L"), and the lowercase "y" and "z". Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
Companion font for TwinBee Outline, based on the arcade version of Konami's "cute 'em up" "TwinBee" (1985), expanded to include some more special characters. In the game, on-screen text uses both an outline color and a separate fill. To achieve the same look, you can combine TwinBee Solid with TwinBee Outline.
This is a clone of TwinBee OutlineRecreation of the font used in the arcade version of Konami's "cute 'em up" "TwinBee" (1985), expanded to include some more special characters. In the game, on-screen text uses both an outline color and a separate fill. To achieve the same look, you can combine TwinBee Outline with TwinBee Solid.
Recreation of the pixel font from Gargoyle Games' "Tir Na Nog" (1984) on the ZX Spectrum.
Note on the Spectrum and C64 version, the font defined in the game includes uppercase letters (not used in the game), as well as special characters and punctuation. In the Amstrad CPC version, only the lowercase alphabet is present, and any other characters (numbers, punctuation, etc) are pulled from the standard Amstrad system font.
The same font was reused in the prequel to this game, "Dun Darach" (1985).
Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
Recreation of the built-in font found in the old Thomson line of 8-bit computers (Thomson MO5, MO5E, MO5NR, MO6, T9000, TO7, TO7/70, TO8, TO8D, TO9, TO9+ and Olivetti Prodest PC128).
This recreation combines the character sets found in the various localised versions. A few accented characters have been added to make the set more complete, but note that there are no acute/grave/circumflex accent versions for uppercase letters.
Apart from that, only the characters present in the original font (that I could find through emulation) have been included.
A faithful, authentic, all-caps, nostalgic 8-bit font based on 1st-party Nintendo Entertainment System games, such as Duck Hunt, Tetris, Dr. Mario, Clu Clu Land, Pinball, Gyromite, Baseball, Urban Champion, and of course, as the name says in the font, Super Mario Bros.!
Featuring a grand total of 1085 glyphs! If we do glyph number translation, 1085 translates to October 1985, back when the Nintendo Entertainment System first launched in North America!
Now you're typing with power!
Recreation of the pixel font from Mastertronic's "Spellbound" (1985) on the Amstrad CPC, ZX Spectrum, and Commodore 64.
The same font was reused (with a few minor changes to punctuation/special characters) in the sequels "Knight Tyme" (1986) and "Stormbringer" (1987)
Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
Based on the Section Z (games), released in December 1985 for the Arcade, May 1987 for Japan, July 1987 for the USA, and September 1987 for the EU.
Most likely, I recently created that is similar to Section Z by NBABABAFONTNES, because; I managed to do it. I saw a font that has no perfect symbols.
Even though I created a perfect one that is one pixelated font, Section26, "called it: Section Z". I also created some HUD Fonts, Stenciled (Title screen word "PUSH START" and Staff Credits). Similar to Section Z, released December, I also started out my very first FontStruct Creation! NBABABAFONTS Cpomany is now founded! Even though it's all set to those tilde characters for the section z. I recommended this font is usable for users. Downloading this font is super great.
And if you recommended this to use this font, you can now type with super!
But then I don't include Asian Words because Japanese gives me weeks or months/years to make.
Hope you like it!
Recreation of the pixel font from Konami's "Scooter Shooter" (1985). Same as "Mikie" (1984), but with expanded set of special characters. Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
Presenting Carolco Pictures, Carolco and Pack-In-Video's Rambo, released in 1987 (or 1985 and 1988). This font is similar to Predator (NES). This font based in movies, which was completely moved to the Rambo Series. This is similar to Nintendoid font, which was created by Patrick H. Lauke, of the particular.: the lowercase, custom numbers and the sexy ampersand are worth pointing out here. And Rambo does not have japanese fonts so; this font is similar to Predator (NES) (Complete).
This is a clone of Predator NESRecreation of the pixel font from UPL/Taito's "Raiders5" (1985), a variation and slight expansion on "Ninja Kid" (1984).
The lowercase is not used in the game. Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
This is a clone of Ninja KidRecreation of the pixel font from VEB Polytechnik's "Poly-Play" (1985), an old arcade machine from the former GDR. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly_Play
Note the strangely cut off "?", "j", "g" (indistinguishable from "q") and round brackets.
This recreation uses "Upper half block" (U+2580) for what would be a (non-standard) "Upper one quarter block"), the "Lower one eighth block" (U+2581) to "Full block" (U+2588) sequence of block elements, "Light shade" (U+2591) for the diagonal pattern, "Medium shade" (U+2592), and "Dark shade" (U+2593) for the vertical pattern.
Individual games use some custom symbols which don't map easily to unicode and have not been included.