A fairly faithful re-creation of the basic Latin set (plus a few extra characters) of the Atari ST 6×6 system font, which was used for, among other things, icon labels on the desktop (where only uppercase was used).
Recreation of the primary pixel font from Atari Games' "Cyberball" (1988), reused in "Cyberball 2072" (1989) and "Tournament Cyberball 2072" (1989). Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
Clone of Road Blasters. Font from Road Blasters, (C) 1987 Atari Games
This is a clone of Road BlastersClone of Blasteroids. Font from Blasteroids, (C) 1987 Atari Games
This is a clone of BlasteroidsClone of Cloak & Dagger. Font from Cloak & Dagger, (C) 1983 Atari
This is a clone of Cloak & DaggerRecreation of the pixel font from Atari's "Cops'n Robbers" (1976). Very similar to Atari's "Night Driver" (1976), but note the difference in the "C".
This font appears to have been "borrowed" by a few subsequent games of the era, such as Exidy's "Car Polo" (1977). Note the strangely small "4".
Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
This is a clone of Night DriverRecreation of the pixel font from Atari/Midway's "T-MEK" (1994).
In this recreation, the lowercase letters have been shifted by one pixel, to set them on the same baseline as the uppercase characters. Note the addition of the "1." - "6." numbers, mapped to the roman numeral code point (U+2160 - U+2165).
Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
Recreation of the pixel font from Horror Soft/Adventure Soft's "Elvira: Mistress of the Dark" (1990). This font was also used in "Elvira II: The Jaws of Cerberus" (1991) and "Waxworks" (1992).
Slightly expanded to complete the set of accented characters, beyond the ones used in the French and German versions of the game. Apart from this, only the characters used in the game have been included.
Presenting Atari Games, Jaleco, Tengen and Konami's Rampart, released in 1991 for the Famicom and NES. This game is based on Movies.
Recreation of the pixel font from Atari's "Tank 8" (1976).
Note the "Atari" logo character, mapped to "black up-pointing triangle" (U+25B2).
Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.