🌐 EN

πŸ”€ Fancy Font Generator

Type your text and see it instantly converted into 15 Unicode "fancy font" styles β€” bold, italic, script, fraktur, double-struck and more. Copy any result straight into your Instagram, Discord, or Twitter bio or posts. Only Latin letters and digits are supported; non-Latin text such as Hangul or Chinese passes through unchanged.

GUIDE

Learn more

01

1. What "Fancy Fonts" Actually Are

These stylized letters aren't a font change at all β€” they're distinct Unicode characters. A bold "𝗔" and a regular "A" are entirely separate code points that simply render as bold, so the style survives being pasted into any app regardless of what font it uses. That's exactly why they're popular for jazzing up an Instagram bio or making a social post title stand out.

02

2. Why Only Latin Script Is Supported

This tool relies on Unicode's "Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols" block, which only defines styled variants for A-Z, a-z, and 0-9. There simply are no equivalent code points for Hangul, Chinese, Japanese, or other non-Latin scripts, so that text passes through unchanged in every style. This is a hard limitation of the Unicode standard itself, not a bug in this tool.

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3. Accessibility and Compatibility Caveats

Because these are separate code points rather than plain text, some screen readers may mispronounce or skip them entirely, and very old devices or fonts may render them as boxes (tofu glyphs) instead of the intended letters. Use fancy fonts sparingly β€” for a headline or a short emphasized phrase β€” rather than for large blocks of body text.

Frequently asked questions

Does this send my text to a server?
No. Every conversion happens instantly in your browser β€” this tool never calls a backend API.
Will this work with Hangul (Korean) or Chinese text?
No. This tool uses Unicode's Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols block, which only defines styled variants for Latin letters and digits, so Korean, Chinese, and other non-Latin text passes through unconverted.
Will these fonts display everywhere?
Mostly yes β€” since they're just regular Unicode text, most modern browsers, apps, and social platforms render them fine. Some very old devices or fonts with limited Unicode coverage may show boxes (tofu) instead.