Presenting Capcom's 1943: The Battle of the Midway (aka. 1944, or 1943: The Battle of Valhalla), released in 1987 for the Arcade, and 1988 for the FC/NES. Those letters are similar to Gun.Smoke. Thus, it made a mistake because it supposed to be The Battle of midway, released in 1942 in movies.
Hail, fellow Tenno. Some of you might know me as OmegaShadowcry. Here we have an approximation of the Corpus written language from Warframe. Made with references to each of the known letters. You might need to have two space between the words, as the letter shapes make it difficult to distinguish between words in some cases. PLEASE NOTE: I current only have the Corpus letters set to the Capital letters. Eventually, I will change this, rest assured.
(Updated 9/4/2023: He did not change this.)
Presenting Capcom's Darkwing Duck, released in 1992 (or 1993). This font is the same to Talespin.
Presenting Konami's Gyruss, released in 1983 for the Arcade, 1988 for the FDS, and February 1989 for the NES. This game is similar to falsion but bad.
One of the many fonts used in "Hammerin' Harry: Ghost Building Company" by Irem for the Game Boy. This one can be seen on the title screen.
None of the fonts used in the game seem to have been completed. Analysis with VBA's Tile Viewer reveals only the glyphs needed to spell out what little text exists. In particular this font has only the glyphs "BCDEILMNORSTY139©". Thus, I took it upon myself to make the font more complete.
I did not add lowercase, since it's impossible to tell what style it would have been drawn in. EVERY font in the game is in uppercase... though some of the others do have small caps for "lowercase".
Presenting dB-SOFT and Nintendo's Layla, (aka., (hacked version of layla, Layla: The Iris Missions)), released in 1986.
Presenting Capcom and TMS's Little Nemo: The Dream Master (aka. Pajama Hero Nemo), released in 1989 for the Famicom and 1990 for the NES.
This was based on Little Nemo, based on movies.
Font used for the NES game Godzilla: Monsters of Monsters in info boxes and the password screen. Added a few characters/symbols.
- Game (c) by Compile, Toho Cinefile for Nintendo Entertaimnent System
-Franchise (c) by Toho
Presenting Koei's Nobunaga's Ambition, (aka. Nobunaga's Ambition: Zenkokuban), released in 1989.
Presenting Tierheit and Sunsoft's Pescatore (Prototype), released in 1991.