Clone of LucasArts SCUMM - Alt - Outline. Alternate characters for the credits typeface in "Indiana Jones And The Fate Of Atlantis", (C) 1992/1993 LucasArts.
August 2025 Update: This font design appears to have been inspired by/taken from Lithos Pro, the 1989 Adobe font by Carol Twombly.
This is a clone of LucasArts SCUMM - Alt - OutlineTypeface used for the credits in "Indiana Jones And The Fate Of Atlantis", (C) 1992/1993 LucasArts - Solid Version.
This font design appears to have been inspired by/taken from Lithos Pro, the 1989 Adobe font by Carol Twombly.
Update 2026 02-12: Corrected a pixel missing from the right stem of the capital N.
Update 2026 02-13: Corrected 2 pixels missing from the inside bottom left stem of the capital A.
This is a clone of LucasArts SCUMM - Credits - OutlineA VCR font of my own, inspired by other VCR fonts. Very compact; everything stays within a 16x10 grid.
This is one I've been wanting to make. It's basically just a little remake of the original VCR OSD Mono made by Riciery Santos Leal (mrmanet) that also has more characters than the original. Do whatever you want with this. Enjoy. :>
Decided to overhaul it. Mainly changed the x-height to be the same as the original.
Smooth version of the characters, items and overworld map icons from "Advanced Dungeons and Dragons" by Mattel Electronics (1982) for the Intellivision Home Video Game Console system, later re-released as "Advanced Dungeons and Dragons: Cloudy Mountain."
One of my two favorite Intellivision games, with the other being "Tron Deadly Discs" (1982).
Keymap:
A–D Adventurer Right #1–4
E–F Bat #1–2
G–H Spider Right #1–2
I–J Rat Right #1–2
K–L Demon #1–2
M–N Snake Right #1–2
O–P Dragon Right #1–2
Q–R Winged Dragon Right #1–2
S–V Arrows #1–4
W–X Blob #1–2
Y–Z Death Cloud #1–2
a–d Adventurer Left #1–4
e–f Spider Left #1–2
g–h Rat Left #1–2
i–j Snake Left #1–2
k–l Dragon Left #1–2
m–n Winged Dragon Left #1–2
o Quiver
p Ladder
q Boat
r Axe
s Key
t Crown Left Half
u Crown Right Half
v Crown Complete
w Rat Droppings
x Demon Tracks
y Animal Skull
1 Overworld Map - House/Start
2 Overworld Map - Mountains
3–4 Overworld Map - Forest #1–2
5–7 Overworld Map - River #1–3
8 Overworld Map - Vertical Fence
9 Overworld Map - Vertical Gate
0 Overworld Map - Horizontal Fence
- Overworld Map - Horizontal Gate
! Overworld Map - Three-Member Party
@ Overworld Map - Two-Member Party
# Overworld Map - One-Member Party
$ Overworld Map - Using Boat
% Overworld Map - Using Axe
^ Overworld Map - Using Key
& Overworld Map - Crown (End Game)
* Overworld Map - Cloudy Mountain
( Overworld Map - Cloudy Mountain Snow Peak
[ Overworld Map - Cloudy Mountain Cloud #1
] Overworld Map - Cloudy Mountain Cloud #2
\ Overworld Map - Cloudy Mountain Cloud #3
Characters, items and overworld map icons from "Advanced Dungeons and Dragons" by Mattel Electronics (1982) for the Intellivision Home Video Game Console system, later re-released as "Advanced Dungeons and Dragons: Cloudy Mountain."
One of my two favorite Intellivision games, with the otherbeing "Tron Deadly Discs" (1982).
Keymap:
A–D Adventurer Right #1–4
E–F Bat #1–2
G–H Spider Right #1–2
I–J Rat Right #1–2
K–L Demon #1–2
M–N Snake Right #1–2
O–P Dragon Right #1–2
Q–R Winged Dragon Right #1–2
S–V Arrows #1–4
W–X Blob #1–2
Y–Z Death Cloud #1–2
a–d Adventurer Left #1–4
e–f Spider Left #1–2
g–h Rat Left #1–2
i–j Snake Left #1–2
k–l Dragon Left #1–2
m–n Winged Dragon Left #1–2
o Quiver
p Ladder
q Boat
r Axe
s Key
t Crown Left Half
u Crown Right Half
v Crown Complete
w Rat Droppings
x Demon Tracks
y Animal Skull
1 Overworld Map - House/Start
2 Overworld Map - Mountains
3–4 Overworld Map - Forest #1–2
5–7 Overworld Map - River #1–3
8 Overworld Map - Vertical Fence
9 Overworld Map - Vertical Gate
0 Overworld Map - Horizontal Fence
- Overworld Map - Horizontal Gate
! Overworld Map - Three-Member Party
@ Overworld Map - Two-Member Party
# Overworld Map - One-Member Party
$ Overworld Map - Using Boat
% Overworld Map - Using Axe
^ Overworld Map - Using Key
& Overworld Map - Crown (End Game)
* Overworld Map - Cloudy Mountain
( Overworld Map - Cloudy Mountain Snow Peak
[ Overworld Map - Cloudy Mountain Cloud #1
] Overworld Map - Cloudy Mountain Cloud #2
\ Overworld Map - Cloudy Mountain Cloud #3
Smooth version of the Intellivision font, used in Mattel Electronic's games for their Intellivision Home Video Game Console system.
This is a clone of IntellivisionMain text font used in Star Wars: X-Wing, (C) 1993 LucastArts Entertainment Company, and Star Wars: TIE Fighter, (C) 1994 LucasArts Entertainment Company, as well as on the main menu screen for Agents (players) and Missions (game levels) for Star Wars: Dark Forces, (C) 1995 LucastArts Entertainment Company.
Have 70 Tags.
Font used in the DOS versions of "Star Trek: 25th Anniversary," (C) 1992 (Diskette)/1994 (CD-ROM), Interplay Productions. The Cursor Block for the Save and Load screens is located in the # position. Spacing is based on the actual in-game text as opposed to the opening title screen. Note that the black outlines surrounding the colored interior font are not present in this recreation.
For the extended version, please see the excellent recreation by @Patrick H. Lauke (redux):
The Unicode bitmap font from Minecraft, also known as GNU Unifont. The game has a font priority system called "providers" that looks for bitmap data for a specific character in the non-Latin European character set first, then in the accented Latin character set, then in the game's low-res default font, then finally here, in the high-res Unicode character set. You can override this priority system by going into Options... > Language..., then setting "Force Unicode Font" to ON.
The game stores this font in images containing 16 rows and 16 columns of characters. Each character is 16 pixels wide and 16 pixels tall, totalling 256 characters per image. Each image represents one Unicode codepage, and there are 256 pages, which covers characters U+0000 to U+FFFF. Control characters and most CJK characters are omitted here, because FontStruct doesn't officially support them.
The font is not monospace, however, so the effective widths of each character are stored in a separate file called glyph_sizes.bin. Information for each character is stored in one byte, and the upper and lower 4 bits of this byte represent the start column and end column with a number ranging from 0 to 15, where 0 is the leftmost column of the character's allotted 16x16 space, and 15 is the rightmost column, respectively.
Knowing all of this allowed me to automate most of the steps involved in creating this recreation. I did not use the FontStructor to make this, I instead used a program to directly interact with FontStruct's API. It is possible to add unsupported characters to a font with this method, but I chose to stay within the limits of what is officially supported.
Font used for the credits, copy protection screen, help menu, and restore game screen for Fire Hawk: Thexder - The Second Contact, (C) 1989, 1990 Game Arts Co, Ltd / (C) 1990 Sierra On-Line, Inc. (The DOS start-up screen also states that this game is alternately titled 'Thexder II Firehawk'.) As with many Japanese games, the period (.) is set above the baseline; it has been lowered here, but the original can be found in the More Latin section. The Block character is located in the @ position.
Font used for the start menu, in-game menus, character interactions, and on-screen displays for Fire Hawk: Thexder - The Second Contact, (C) 1989, 1990 Game Arts Co, Ltd / (C) 1990 Sierra On-Line, Inc. (The DOS start-up screen also states that this game is alternately titled as 'Thexder II Firehawk'.) Letter J* and modified B N P by Goatmeal. Original B N P found in the More Latin area, along with the 'digital counter' numerals as a bonus. The Block character is located in the @ position.
* Oddly enough, I couldn't find the letter J used anywhere during my playthough...
Font used for the copy protection and in-game text for Silpheed Super Dogfighter, (C) 1986, 1988 Game Arts Co, Ltd / (C) 1988 Sierra On-Line, Inc. Numerals 3 4 6 7 8 9 by Goatmeal; the only numbers used for bonus value displays in-game are 0 1 2 5. The Block character is located in the @ position.
Monospaced version of the text font used for the introduction, character interactions, and finale of Zeliard, (C) 1987, 1990 Game Arts Co, Ltd / (C) 1990 Sierra On-Line, Inc. Modified q by Goatmeal; the original q is found in the More Latin area.
Proportional version of the text font used for the credits and saved game/restore menu of Zeliard, (C) 1987, 1990 Game Arts Co, Ltd / (C) 1990 Sierra On-Line, Inc. Modified q by Goatmeal; the original q is found in the More Latin area.
In the game, the spacing/kerning between various letter and/or punctuation combinations is highly variable, anywhere from 2-6 pixels. To strike a balance, a standard three-pixel width was chosen for letters and most punctuation; the remaing punctuation glyphs have a 6-pixel width, while the numbers retain their 2-pixel width.
This is a clone of Zeliard - MonospacedSmooth version of the in-game dialogue font from Space Quest 6: Roger Wilco In The Spinal Frontier, (C) 1995 Sierra On-Line.
Includes the Positive and Negative Post symbols and Sierra logo; modified / (to match \) and characters % $ [ | ] ~ by Goatmeal. Original / found in the More Latin area. Modified from the original Sierra Resource File Tags: "70.fon" & "71.fon"
Please note that during the "smoothing process" (from pixel to "bezier"), some liberties were taken with certain glyph designs.
This is a clone of Sierra Font 70 fonInitials used with the non-speech text in King's Quest V: Absence Makes The Heart Go Yonder!, (C) 1990 Sierra On-Line. These letters were not generated using an in-game font; they were actually pre-rendered static images within the game's art assets, used in conjunction with the Sierra text font Font.004. While the letters were centered within the 16x15 sprites, the I and J were changed to proportional spacing for use with other fonts.
To match the two-tone sprites used in the game, this version allows the user to overlay a partial letter or letters in a different color for use in games or picture/image artwork.
Initials used with the non-speech text in King's Quest V: Absence Makes The Heart Go Yonder!, (C) 1990 Sierra On-Line. These letters were not generated using an in-game font; they were actually pre-rendered static images within the game's art assets, used in conjunction with the Sierra text font Font.004. While the letters were centered within the 16x15 sprites, the I and J were changed to proportional spacing for use with other fonts.
Solid outline font used in King's Quest V: Absence Makes The Heart Go Yonder!, (C) 1990 Sierra On-Line. Sierra Resource File Tag: "font.009" and is paired with the Sierra font "font.008".
This font was used for onle single phrase in the game: "A few hours later....." (occurring twice in the floppy disk version, but only once in the CD-ROM version). Oddly enough, instead of using the outline font.009, the opening credits used the font.008 twice for a 'drop-shadow' effect...
And while they may have been intentional choices, there are several instances where the outline designs don't follow the patterns found with the majority of other glyphs (missing pixels, perhaps for legibility?). As such, the following characters:
• J O P Q R S X c j m n p q r s u v z ! ;
...have all been 'corrected' within the main set of glyphs; their original designs can be found in the More Latin section.
This is a clone of Sierra Font 008Font used in King's Quest V: Absence Makes The Heart Go Yonder!, (C) 1990 Sierra On-Line. Sierra Resource File Tag: "font.008" and is paired with the solid outline version of this font, "font.009".
The font was used for the opening credits and for a single phrase during gameplay:
• Instead of using the solid outline version font.009 for the opening credits, a drop-shadow effect was employed (recreated here in my new sample).
• It was used later in the game WITH the solid outline version font.009 for one single phrase: "A few hours later....." (occurring twice in the floppy disk version, but only once in the CD-ROM version).
Main text font for numerous Sierra SCI games. The version from Space Quest I VGA includes several copy protection symbols and the Roman numeral I. The version from Space Quest IV includes Roman numerals IV and XII, plus a horizontal ™. These glyphs are located in the More Latin area. Circumflex Accent ^ by Goatmeal. Sierra Resource File Tags: "font.004" ; "4.fon" ; "1107.fon" ; "1207.fon"
Please note that "font.004" in the early Hoyle games contain a bold variant of this font.
Font used on the LINC terminal screens, inside LINC-Space, and for player-named saved games in the DOS version of Beneath A Steel Sky, (C) 1994 Revolution Software.
Oddities found within this font's design:
• The j is missing its tittle (corrected here)
• The stem of the k is 1 pixel shy of the full cap height (corrected here)
• There is an extra pixel width of space after the i, the lowercase L (l), the period (.), the colon (:), and the apostrophe ('), likely for increased legibility (retained here)
• The apostrophe (') is one pixel higher than the cap height (retained here)
There are also a few design differences between the glyphs for the player's saved games versus the font used for interacting with LINC (above):
• The saved game capital i (I) and number one (1) both have the same design, which is the same as the LINC lowercase L (l) above
• The saved game lowecase L (l) is actually 1 pixel taller than the cap height
• The saved game exclamation point (!) is 1 pixel shorter than the cap height
The original design oddities and the saved game variants are found in the More Latin section.
This is a clone of Beneath A Steel Sky - LINCFont used on the LINC terminal screens, inside LINC-Space, and for player-named saved games in the DOS version of Beneath A Steel Sky, (C) 1994 Revolution Software.
Oddities found within this font's design:
• The j is missing its tittle (corrected here)
• The stem of the k is 1 pixel shy of the full cap height (corrected here)
• There is an extra pixel width of space after the i, the lowercase L (l), the period (.), the colon (:), and the apostrophe ('), likely for increased legibility (retained here)
• The apostrophe (') is one pixel higher than the cap height (retained here)
There are also a few design differences between the glyphs for the player's saved games versus the font used for interacting with LINC (above):
• The saved game capital i (I) and number one (1) both have the same design, which is the same as the LINC lowercase L (l) above
• The saved game lowecase L (l) is actually 1 pixel taller than the cap height
• The saved game exclamation point (!) is 1 pixel shorter than the cap height
The original design oddities and the saved game variants are found in the More Latin section.