Are you tired of Minecraft's thick and large default fonts? Even if you have Force Unicode Font enabled, it will look rough on high resolution screens. This resource pack will solve these problems so that you can see a more beautiful, modern and smooth font when you play Minecraft.
- Three Major Versions - HD, Basic, Supreme
- Emoji Support
- Fancy Text Support
- Differences in Chinese Writing
Due to different screen resolutions, and Minecraft's font rendering is not resampled as the interface size changes, the same resource pack will appear differently on different screens. In order to provide the desired effect, three major versions have been developed - HD, Basic and Supreme.
Suitable for GUI Scale 3 or above, or game screen resolution of 1024×768, 1280×720, 1366×768, 1280×1024, 1440×900, 1920×1080 or above, or general mobile phones and tablets. Both Java Edition and Bedrock Edition are supported.
Suitable for GUI Scale 2, or game screen resolution of 854×480, 800×600, etc., or mini mobile phones. Both Java Edition and Bedrock Edition are supported.
Suitable for GUI Scale 5 or above, or game screen resolution of 2560×1440, 3840×2160 or above. Only Java Edition 1.13 or above is supported.
The above fonts are available in 5 variants, namely JP, KR, CN, TW and HK. The font is taken from the Noto Sans font family, commissioned by Google.
The font is taken from the Noto Emoji font family, commissioned by Google. Due to technical limitations, most emoji can only be displayed in Java Edition 1.16 or above.
Fonts are taken from:
- Noto Sans, commissioned by Google.
- Noto Sans Math, commissioned by Google.
- Noto Sans Symbols, commissioned by Google.
To use them, you don't need to use commands like /tellraw
and /title
. You just need to use any online fancy text generator, then copy the fancy text and paste it in the game.
Due to technical limitations, most fancy text can only be displayed in Java Edition 1.16 or above.
In Japan, Korea, China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, there are different standards for Chinese characters.
Looking at the two pictures below, you will find that some Chinese characters are written in two or more ways:
In response to the fact that there are at most five different ways to write Chinese characters, this resource pack has also produced five variants.