Recreation of the pixel font from the English version of Nintendo/Game Freak/Creatures' "Pokémon Red/Blue/Yellow" (1998) on the Game Boy.
Note that the "Pokédollar" character has been mapped to the regular "$" sign. The arrows are mapped to "Black Right-Pointing Triangle" (U+25B6), "White Right-Pointing Triangle" (U+25B7), and "Black Down-Pointing Triangle" (U+25BC).
The tile set also includes custom characters that combine letters with apostrophes (e.g. for dialog that includes something like "I'm ...", there is an actual glyph with "'m"). These have not been included in this recreation.
Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
A font which appears in "Defender/Joust" (1995) on Game Boy. This font is complete within the ROM, so only the original characters are included.
This font is used for Defender's menus and gameplay.
The placement of glyphs within the individual 8x8 tiles suggests that this font is meant to be monospaced. I've squinted at this one long enough... it looks right to me! :D
The main text font used for the laptop variant of the Mega Duck game console, a device that usually came in a form very reminescent of a Game Boy. I discovered this device and font through Ashens' YouTube video on the Mega Duck.
I like the font's vaguely Art Deco stylings, so I'm preserving it here.
Note that since I don't own a Mega Duck myself, I am unable to see every glyph. I had to come up with a few myself. They're consistent to the style but may not reflect the look of the actual hardware. The system does seem to have excellent language support so I hope a Mega Duck owner sees this...
Also inconsistent to the actual font is the spacing. The original looks like Monospaced 8px, but the width of "0" makes this impractical.
Finally, bear in mind that each "pixel" on the Mega Duck had lines of separation between itself and its neighbors. I've changed the brick size to 0.8 in an attempt to simulate this. It takes an immense size to accurately reproduce the grid, so I consider this design to be in the High Resolution Pixel category.
Double Case Version
Font recreated from the Game Boy game Super Mario Land.
NOTE: Click 'TrueType Font' when downloading!
Single Case Version
Font recreated from the Game Boy game Super Mario Land.
NOTE: Click 'TrueType Font' when downloading!
This is a clone of Super Mario Land GB DoubleCasetobias uses a different font for his dialogue than most other characters. i'm gonna assume it's because he's stuck morphed, but i dont actually know much about animorphs outside my morbid fascination with this bargin bin pokemon clone
i also dont remember if anybody else uses this font and my lazy ass is not checking :>
This is a clone of Animorphs GBC (dialogue)