It's a remix of Mojangles (the Minecraft font) as seen in Bedrock Edition, but with an exclusive character set. It plans to support Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, and Armenian before Version 1.0. In more complex characters, there will be half or quarter pixels depending on the complexity.
Version: 0.1.2 (In progress)
Added full support for the Ukrainian language.
Also, I personally think that μ is the worst character in my font
Latin: Available in most languages
Cyrillic: Available in a few languages, like Russian
Greek: Finished for the Greek language and double-checking for languages in progress.
Armenian: Done only the letters
Japanese: The Hiragana letters in this font looked very stupid before the secret update. Now they're 3 times better. I'm planning to add Katakana and Grade 1 Kanji, with an additional HSK 1 Chinese.
PUA: Implemented only 3 characters (Version, Pixel Minecraft, Smiley), completely different, UCSUR not supported
Still not being worked on. Making a revamp, which will be private, until finished.
CHANGELOG FOR PRIVATE, UNFINISHED FONT
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Don’t feel like people knowing it anymore.
Śmieć (transcribed as Sjmiecj when using only the characters available in the font) is a font designed to be easily readable, both up close and from far away. The name of the font means "a small piece of trash" in Polish because I will be using it on my new trashcan stickers. This font is meant to be 3D printed as individual letters, so you can reüse punctuation as diacritics when assembling words from these letters.
When to Use Upper/Lower Cases
The font is meant to have an effect when the vowels are just taller lowercases. Start words from a capital letter, so that the sentence "This is a garbage truck" becomes "This Is A Garbage Truck". This is important when a word begins in a vowel. When a vowel letter (or a Y) acts as a consonant, use uppercase, so that the sentence "The royal queenie girl is practicing ventriloquism" becomes "The RoYal QUeenie Girl Is Practicing VentriloqUism". Silent vowel letters that separate two letters from influencing each other's pronunciations are upper cased, like the Spanish name "Miguel" becomes MigUel because the U separates the G from the E so that it's not "Mikhel". On the other hand, silent vowel letters of a different purpose stay lowercase, so that the English word "cane" is simply "Cane". Digraphs containing both vowels and consonants, like the "ti" digraph in "nation" and the "ar" digraph in "cart", use uppercase vowel letters when the digraph makes a consonant sound, but use lowercase vowel letters when the digraph makes a vowel sound: "NatIon", but "Cart".