My first actual font on fontstruct, no way!!! This is my take on a font of the NBC Big N logo from 1976. Someone else made one on another website based on actual letters but honestly a few letters looked really meh to me.
My take isn't based on actual letters but rather letters I thought of to fit with the N. I also added numbers I thought of that could fit with the N's geometric style.
If you're gonna use this, please feel free to credit me as that would be appreciated! Thanks!
NOTE: No lowercase or symbols or any other language/accent letters. Just uppercase and numbers.
Recreation of the pixel font from Activision's "Pitfall: The Mayan Adventure" (1994) on the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis and the SNES.
This recreation uses the special OpenType SVG (TTF+SVG) format, which currently has limited support. For a monochrome version, see this recreation.
The font is the same between the two platforms, with the exception of punctuation characters - this recreation combines the best characters of both version.
Beyond that, only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
This is a clone of Pitfall: The Mayan AdventureRecreation of the pixel font from Activision's "Pitfall: The Mayan Adventure" (1994) on the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis and the SNES.
The font is the same between the two platforms, with the exception of punctuation characters - this recreation combines the best characters of both version.
Beyond that, only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cscuCIzItZQ
AYOUVEVVBNYNYBOCaZbbXI
The alphabet writing system is based on some principles as follows:
1. Because a single line that is too long can make it difficult to recognize its length, each symbol will include a vertical line and there will not be a single vertical line occupying 3-grid distance without horizontal cutting.
2. A symbol must contain a vertical or horizontal stroke in the bottom block to avoid the appearance of two letters with the same appearance but different heights.
3. Due to the vertical line being read first to distinguish different letters before reading the horizontal line, the horizontal line in a letter always starts to the right of the vertical line.
4. In lowercase letters, voiced consonants are always one vertical line higher than clear consonants.
5. The size of vowels is always smaller than that of consonants.
6. Generally, the more commonly used the consonants are, the simpler they are.
7. Letters with more similar pronunciations usually are more similar, such as corresponding voiced and clear consonants, h and f, w and u, y and i, m and n.
8. Letters and numbers can be distinguished by the bottom two strokes.
9. Add a horizontal stroke above the corresponding lowercase letter for uppercase letters.