I came up with an original high-res design, then brickswapped to turn everything into square bricks. The result sort of reminds me of Proxima Punch Pixel Squared, but less art deco and more computer-esque. It has a really old and naive look to it which could make it good for retro-terminal use.
"Buttons Foe" = "Obtuse Font". Not only is it an obtuse font in look and construction, it's reminescent of an era when computers were thought of as adversarial, magic voodoo boxes. So both the name and the anagram are equally applicable. :^)
Version 1.1: Improved and shrank the tokens so that they can fit into the corner of an unflipped tile.
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This is a set of tiles that can be used to create mockups and pieces for the Piecepack board gaming system. Dice not included!
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26 tiles (UPPERCASE) - ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
12 token designs (lowercase) -abcdefghijkl
10 pawn designs (numbers) - 1234567890
Included are reverse sides as well as wildcard/Joker sides (normally not present in Piecepack). These are always the last two in each series.
An even smaller and more stylized take on Madcat/Madkitten. It isn't really a Decolike anymore, but it is readable at smaller sizes than almost all my other designs!
This uses some compression/truncation tricks to fit glyphs into a smaller grid. Those tricks are usually used in pixel designs (such as Chlorophyte) but I think they worked out well here, too!
This is a cloneA small and condensed pixel font which uses a combination of techniques from designs like Marengi Mk2, Micro Machina, and Mncrft. The spacing, along with many glyphs, is experimental and defies my usual conventions.
A stencil version of RC Dynamite made for laser cutting! Could also be an LCD Segment design with slight modification...
This is a clone of RC DynamiteA 5x5 design inspired by architecture, geometric design principles, and terracing. Many letters look precarious - only a good architect could build structures that balanced so well.
Despite having achieved a satisfactory and distinct look with this, I'm not sure if Architecture is the best motif for it... it may evolve more...
Here we have a font made from hand-polished hipsterite rocks found only in the depths of the River Styx. These are the most expensive and most pretentious rocks you can find anywhere. This font is their punishment for existing.
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This is based on rounded rectangles, which have been the subject of a few conversations and in-jokes between friends. Because the rounded areas are rather small, this font needs to be a fairly large size to present the full effect.
A rounded square design made for headlines as an alternative/companion font to Empty Magazine.
See also: Bonds of Force, This Machine Destroys Everything!
Proxima Punch with all curves changed to angles. A more engraved look.
This is a clone of Proxima PunchExperimental 33-segment display. While setting the spacing for Piscrypt Plain, I turned on monospacing and all the glyphs stacked up. I thought that made an interesting shape to design a segmented display on.
This has its own set of composite bricks; feel free to clone it and experiment!
Original size: 20pt
See also: Inkthorn, Miners Guild
A semi-bold Diabolicious. It is the same width and size as the original!
Original size: 5.25pt (use multiples of this value for pixel perfection)
Recommended: Use with kerning turned ON!
This is a clone of DiaboliciousBy request, a chat/comics font which combines features of "Micro Machina" and "Chlorophyte". I took some other liberties with it as well in order to make it more distinctive (see MSVWacegjmtyz).
This turned out extremely well! It's more open and airy than many of my larger designs, and is pleasant and easy to read even at the original size.
Supports Dutch and English.
- WORK IN PROGRESS -
A font for making hexagonal grids and maps.
You can make a map which is infinitely wide and up to 6 rows tall. This will increase to 26 rows tall once I figure out why the spacing breaks down after 6. Once this problem is solved, I'll begin adding setpieces and more tile variations!
13SEP2018: I never did figure out a way to stop the spacing from breaking down. No matter where I place the 7th row or how I alter the spacing, it's always out of place...
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- INSTRUCTIONS -
Type starting with a or A, then b or B, up through fF, to build a column.
Once the map is as tall as you want it, repeat these letters to make the next column.
Use UPPER CASE to create land/floors and lower case to create water/walls.
"A" or "a" must be present in each sequence and each letter must be in its proper place and order for the map to generate properly. Making of irregular maps is possible, but it takes some cleverness to get them to look even. This problem seems to be insurmountable, sorry!
Use six spaces to create a void with the same width as a hex...
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- MAPS TO TRY -
(Copy one, scroll up to the preview & use View -> "User Input" -> Ctrl+V)
1. Plains: ABCDEFABCDEFABCDEFABCDEFABCDEFABCDEFABCDEF
2. River & Pond: ABCDEFabcdEFABCDefABCDEFABcdEFAbcDEFABCDEF
3. Small Maze: aBCdeFABCDEfabcDEfABcdEfaBCDEFabcDefABCdEf
4. Honeycomb: AbCdEfABCDEFAbCdEfABCDEFAbCdEfABCDEFAbCdEf
5. Space: abcdefabcdEfabcdefaBCDefaBCDefabCdefabcdef
6. Coastline: abcdefABcdefABCdefABCDefABCDEfABCDEFABCDEF
7. Stripes: abcdefABCDEFabcdefABCDEFabcdefABCDEFabcdef
8. Broken Terrain: ABA ACDFABCDEFABEABCDEF
9: Yin Yang: AbcdefAbcDefAbcdefABcDefABCDEfABcDEfABCDEf
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Using antialiasing broke the tile arrangements in my graphics software. You may be luckier, but I recommend having both antialiasing and kerning turned OFF.
Have fun!
A design made to have long legs. The mild optical illusion this font creates was a happy coincidence!
I changed the name to "Taller Tales" since it seems that many fonts called "Tall Tales" actually exist...
Original size: 40pt (use multiples of this value for pixel perfection, or use in combination with antialiasing)
A design based on waffles and cheap lawnchairs - you know, the ones with woven plastic stretched over a tubular frame. "Awful Waffle" is a colloquial nickname for Waffle House.
Like many of my fonts, I'm just doodling and publishing this one to get the idea down. Maybe I'll continue it later.
By request, a semimodular font which looks like a casual interpretation of "General Failure". This is also more condensed and more Pixel Optimized than its predecessor. It makes me think "fire station in a cartoon".
It uses a technique which folds some slabs in, which prevents slabs from altering the heights of letters - but slabs are still allowed to alter width to some extent. The slabs which do this are incorporated into glyphs' structures to such an extent that they are integral parts of the linework.
This could be kerned more closely, but like me, the requestor uses software which doesn't support kerning. Consider the spacing as part of the desired quirkiness.
Logo font for the fictional band "Roan City Roadslickers" from D2:ES.
This is a clone of RC DynamiteVector art used for the Halftruth Lens and Deceptive Lens in the game Naively. These are pecuilar objects which impart the holder with certain visions relating to things the holder wonders about.
These lenses and the symbols' meanings are randomized each game, so the player never knows beforehand which lens is which. Below is what would be the default layout for an unseeded game...
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A,B,C,D,E,F,G - thank you, no, yes, maybe, you're right, you're wrong, silence
H,I,J,K,L,M,N - you're right, maybe, yes, no, silence, thank you, you're wrong
O,P - you already know, it's nothing we have discussed
Experimental cloud flower doodle thing.
While this looks bizarre, it creates some unique effects. It is also visible at FAR smaller sizes than any other font I have seen. Check out the Pixel view to see. Interestingly, this superb readability is lost once the font is enlarged from this size.
I haven't figured out what to do with the numerals yet, and only put the placeholders there so I could get a better preview on my page.
Recreation of a font from "Proxima", a 2000 public-domain homebrew SHMUP game by Alan Obee for Game Boy Color. This font is used on the title screen and high-score screens (though the high-score version is built of tiles and looks much more detailed).
.#$!? are inventions - not present in the original font, but useful nonetheless.