This is my imagination of how Cyrrilic and Latin letters would look like if were more "runic".
This font's title means "masterpiece" in Spanish. The FontStruction can be used for closed-captioning, translating, videogame developing, cable footages, and much more! Please give credit to us when you download this font. Tell us what you think in the comment section below!
Good luck and have a nice day, everyone!
Basic Latin, Latin-1 Supplement, Latin Extended-A, IPA Extentions, Greek and Coptic, Cyrillic, Cyrillic Supplement, Armenian, Hebrew, Devangari, Latin Extended Additional, (Some) Currency Symbols, (Some) General Punctuation, (Some) CJK Symbols and Punctuation, Hiragana, Katakana, Vertical Forms, (Some) Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms, Thai, Mongolian
Mastar Font - Still Work In Progress and Not Finished although I may be reaching the size limit for a fontstruction...
This is a clone6x5 pixel script I made for use with the Latin, Cyrillic, Arabic, and Devanagari alphabets; diacritics are integrated. 5x5 pixels are dedicated to base symbols, and the uppermost pixel is reserved for diacritics.
A simple remake of my original Brixel, but made to be monospace and 8x8
(-Currently being extended-)
U+E000 is the .notdef glyph.
This is the largest Nokia font ever.
UPDATE [27 JUN 2023]: Fixed "ÿ". U+00FF
UPDATE [29 JUN 2023]: Fixed "ǐ". U+01D0
UPDATE [09 NOV 2023]: Fixed "ـ". U+0640
Making it while listening to music
It's not kerned yet, but I need a lot of studying kerning. Also i'm too lazy to kern :(
It can only support Latin, Cyrillic and Greek (And sometimes Coptic), plus, Hebrew and Armenian!
From the Final Fantasy Advance and DS games. Specifically the final version, from FFIV DS. I tried to make it compatible with all languages that use Latin, Cyrillic, and Greek scripts. Plus Japanese Hiragana and Katakana.
If you see problems, let me know.
CHANGES FROM IN-GAME ORIGINAL:
•Added additional letters and diacritics.
•Changed the circumflexed letters to use actual circumflexs instead of inverted breves, so I could add breved letters.
•Used half-pixels to center diacritics over letters.
•Made some diacriticized letters more consistent.
The year is 2020. Oni is still making futuristic-y fonts. I was told there'd be flying cars. The future lied to me.
Contains support for:
All modern European Latin langauges (Full Latin-A character set), Cyrillic languages (Russian/Serbo-Croat/Bulgarian/Macedoian/Ukranian/Belarussian), Greek
Super4 - basic and more latin, including kerning after the "f" and before the "j".
I set out to create a regular pixel-based, square font. The unifying theme is the thicker vertical portion on most letters, most noticeable in the capitals, which are 4 pixels wide - hence the name Super4. It's my first font and I quite enjoyed working on it.
ALTERNATIVES CAN BE FOUND IN THE LOWER CASE TO CHANGE THE NOISE DISTRIBUTION.
I WASN’T REALLY THINKING ABOUT THE CYRILLIC ALPHABET WHEN I DESIGNED IT, SO THE LETTERS: “А” AND “Л” AND “Н” AND “П” ARE THE SAME.
A blocky, somewhat futuristic, mostly sans-serif font. All latin characters are in square dimensions. Lower case letters are a third of the size of upper case letters. It was developed with my 2019 spelling reform proposal for European languages in mind, and therefore may posess and/or lack some features unexpectedly.
This is a cloneUSE THE FULL-STOP FOR THE TERMINAL UNDERLINE.
“MOTU” IS A MĀORI WORD MEANING “ISLAND” OR “SEPERATE”.
THIS WAS MADE WITH FONTSTRUXIUS.
THIS IS BASED ON MY HANDWRITING. NOT MY REGULAR HANDWRITING — THAT DOESN’T ALLOW FOR LOWER-CASE LETTERS; SO WHENEVER I NEED TO WRITE SOMETHING WITH LOWER-CASE LETTERS (SUCH AS IN EXAMS.), I USE THIS STYLE.
I KNOW THAT IN PLACES IT LOOKS A BIT BROKEN. BUT AT THE SMALL SIZES OF BULK TEXT, IT SHOULDN’T BE TOO NOTICEABLE; IT’S NOT REALLY DESIGNED AS A DISPLAY FONT.
AND I ALSO KNOW THAT SOME SERIFS AND STROKES AREN’T EXACTLY COMMONPLACE (SEE THE UPPER SERIFS ON THE LETTER: “u”). IT’S JUST HOW MY HANDWRITING TURNED OUT.
INTENDED LANGAUGE SUPPORT
• ENGLISH
• RUSSIAN
• TE REO MĀORI
“WHAKAITI” IS A MĀORI WORD MEANING “TO MAKE SMALL”. IT’S ROUGHLY PRONOUNCED: “ɸɑkɑiti”.
This was featured inside my font: Pelagic Octopus.
Some alternative (less intrusive) forms are found in the capital section.
Use a size of thirteen point in order for the pixels to match up.