Recreation of the pixel font from Jaleco's "Pop Flamer" (1982), with a few extra punctuation marks from the expanded version used in "Chameleon" (1983). Only the characters present in the games' tile sets have been included.
Recreation of the pixel font from Sun Electronics/Sunsoft's "Markham" (1983).
This font is used in other games of the same era from this developer - "Arabian" (1983), "BanBam" (1984), "Strength & Skill" (1984), "Farmers Rebellion" (1985).
Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
Presenting Hudson Soft's Lode Runner, released in 1984, and 1983 for Doug Smith for the Nintendo Entertainment System. This game is sequel to bomberman, released in 1985 for the Family Computer, and released in 1987 for the Nintendo Entertainment System. Also Lode Runner is related to Championship Lode Runner, released in 1984 for the Family Computer. Championship Lode Runner was published by hudson soft since 1984, and Lode Runner Series are under license from broderbund. After that, the Lode Runner Series are licensed for Broderbund Software for Nintendo Entertainment System. The Lode Runner series are licensed by Nintendo of America in Nintendo Entertainment system. The Bomberman ending screen was shown to the Lode Runner Series to play.
Presenting Activision and Pony's Super Pitfall, released in 1986 for the Family Computer, and 1987 for the NES This font is almost the same to Onyanko Town.
Presenting Taito's Elevator Action, released in 1983, or MCMLXXXV. This font is similar to Space Cruiser, which was created by Patrick H. Lauke, Elevator Action returns is now available on Nintendo Switch. They cannot guess which year was released in the NES and Famicom.
This is a clone of Space CruiserRecreation of the pixel font from Sega's "Hopper Robo" (1983).
The font does include a second set of numerals that match the look of the letters, but that set is incomplete (missing the "6" and "7"). For this reason, decided to go with the more distinctive "segmented" numerals which are used in the game itself.
Only the characters present in the game's tile set 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!