I had this issue before and what fixed it for me was double checking the font-family name within the css file. Mine had a weird space which was causing it not to load since it has to match directly with what you input in the settings tab. I also used an OTF file.

The generic font is fine, I can't think of any game that let you change fonts unless you know of one. Most games go with the easiest to read, cursive suggestion would be difficult to read in a hurry during a fight if someone has the rime to type it.


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Thor tends to speak in a more stylized font to show the difference in his voice compared to Captain America. It's not -needed-, obviously. You could just make him use fancier words or different colors.

I'm not aware of how effort-intensive this would be. I can say that because Windows and Mac both come with a massive selection of fonts, the diversity of customization increase could be pretty massive even if we stick to the shared general list of fonts without letting people download and use special fonts.

You pretty much sum up what can already be done, colored bubbles. Its up to the player how to present it in what the font is. We don't need a thousand different styles and someone decides to make the equivalent to "walawala washinton" from the Buggs bunny skit getting an eye exame with small font.

While those examples don't seem too problematic, some fonts can be rather difficult to read for some people (not even counting the intentional ones like windings). If something like this was done I'd propose the compromise of it only affecting the speech bubbles and not the chat log. Still good for RPing, and still readable by others.

I didn't mean changing of size, just it would be like squinting as Bugs when getting the test...actually Youtube shows it as the guy giving the test so there was some squinting in it ?. Yeah, the size does get smaller in that skit but as you notice above some fonts natually have different sizes. Gods know I didn't abuse stuff like that in highscool when they said to write a 3 page report (not font directed, teachers would always say a specific font)....just 1.05 instead of 1 inch margins or slightly increased spaces between the lines; you could half ass another half a page as the spaces start to add up ?

My first word bubble font was uneven, though. And, as I gradually realized, not historically appropriate to the aesthetic of the comic. It so happened that my mother-in-law was cleaning out her attic, and found a series of textbooks from a mail-away art course, published in 1953. Of particular interest to me was Book 4: Commercial Lettering.

In this book, I found an incredible example of cartoon lettering. The alphabet, drawn by Joseph Almars, is abstracted from the comics of Luther D. Bradley, a cartoonist for the Chicago Daily News in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Here was an alphabet that was designed for word bubbles, hand lettered, and historically appropriate.

Does anybody know the exact date A'ME switched from bubble font to the current font?

I looked it up and down the interwebs, but I couldn't find anything definitive.

I think the lower case font changed to bubble font in... 81? That's about it.

Thank you.

No answer to your question but it bugs the hell out of me. People refer to "Bubble Font" as its a standard old school thing. It's just a rounded serif font and there a hundreds of different fonts. The term "Bubble Fonts" is really a pet peeve of mine. AME old schools used "Cooper Black Italic". Bitstream or ITC. Just saying. Redline, Powerlite and other "Bubble Fonts" differ.

Well, I call it bubble font because it is what everybody else calls them. If I say A"ME grips with the Cooper Black Italic font, nobody would know what the hell I'm saying. I don't even care about whether they are old school or not...I wanna know because me and many others are probably going nuts trying to find some "bubble font" grips for our late 80s bikes, trying to be era correct and stuff, when all we need is the current, more modern font. Can you imagine if "bubble font" went away in 86/87 and the new font replaced it? It'd cost $6 bucks to get the damn grips instead of $30 or $40. Shit, imagine that?

So where are all the gurus? 

All I've seen is 3 different fonts for A'ME grips. All I'd like to know is when it went from what it is commonly referred to as bubble font to the straight modern font, that's all...

Thanks

No idea on the date of the switch but it wasn't an overnight switch but more a gradual switch. I say that because there was a period (at least form Ame Tri and Rounds) where the outer packaging had the modern square font while the grips inside still had the bubble font. I imagine it was during the 90s

The ultra soft, 100% Cotton pink Radarte Logo Sweatpant displays a streamlined silhouette with its black corded drawstring waistband, elastic at the ankles, and a bubble font logo. Pair with our matching hoodie and tshirt.

I'm breaking my head trying to change the font of all the titles (main so as axis-titles) in this Bubble Chart. I would like to use "Neutraface Text Demi Alt", size +14. Could someone please help me? Do you know maybe any fancy Bubble Chart code?

From looking at this screenshot, I would like to put the pattern inside the text but keep the thick black outline. It is a bubble writing font. I have created 2 layers. One for the text, one for the pattern

The Custom Bubble Font Pendant gives you a completely unique look. Its your personal statement in perfectly crafted, solid bubble font. Pair this with other pendants and tennis chains for an even bolder statement.

Introducing Bubblicity - Playful font family with 6 styles including color ones. This bubble font created with love to sweet 90's and 2000s period and a little inspired with street graffiti combined with line elements flying around it. Perfect for posters, posts, invitations and other art stuff. Also you can use the font as logo. You can play with spacing because letters perfectly overlaps each other. Try to use multiply blending options and color changing in hue/saturation. A lot of opportunities with other options like bevel and emboss.

Click the Download Font button below each section to download that particular font. Click the Download Demo button to download a working demo version of Remark Office OMR that automatically installs all of our fonts.

Gravic designed this font to create encircled letters and numbers that can be used in virtually any Windows-based word processing application. The font was designed with Remark Office OMR in mind, so it will work well with your forms. When using the font, type your numbers and letters with spaces in between. 10-12 point size is ideal.

Remark Hall of Fame user Tom Hays designed an extended version of the OMR Bubbles font. This font includes several symbols not found in the OMR Bubbles font as well as two-digit numbers. You will also find a helpful PDF file within the zip file that explains how to create characters using the font.

Remark Hall of Fame user Tom Hays designed a version of the OMR Bubbles font that will create lower case encircled letters as well as two-digit numbers up to 20. You will also find a helpful PDF file within the zip file that explains how to create characters using the font.

Gravic designed this font to create square answer options with letters and numbers that can be used in virtually any Windows-based word processing application. The font was designed with Remark Office OMR in mind, so it will work well with your forms. When using the font, type your numbers and letters with spaces in between. 10-12 point size is ideal. ff782bc1db

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