A strong and rounded fixed-width font, aimed at single-font apps such as consoles and text editors. Good for programming and text interface design. Has more glyphs and complete Unicode subsets than most default monospaced fonts.
NOTE: If you want to use this font in Windows console apps, please do NOT download it from here because this website is unable to mark TTF font files as Monospaced, in the way that Windows requires. Instead, read the comments below for 22nd May 2019 and download it from the link provided.
This is a cloneThis font makes use of the most ancient forms of each of our capital English letters. Glyphs that would have been repeated because of shared origins have been given alternate forms of the original glyph to enable differentiation. The question and exclamation mark originate with Latin, written with two letters vertically, and in this version are written the same way but with the original forms of the letters. The rest of the punctuation comes from Greek origins or is made to look similar. The following website can act as a key for the meaning of each letter: http://www.ancient-hebrew.org/3_al.html
A surprisingly legible 5×10 pixel font, with distinct glyphs (capital I/lowercase L aren't just vertical lines, "zero" has a backslash line through it), based on a font that I made for a now-lost Visual Pinball table (explaining its name).
This font supports the basic latin alphabet, numbers, and symbols, and also includes accented latin characters. There is an incomplete set of hiragana characters included, but it's far from complete. Some glyphs such as the copyright symbol, registered trademark symbol, and Japanese characters are 10×10 pixels.