What is Fancy Text Generator?
Fancy Text Generator turns plain text into Unicode characters like bold, italic, script, double-struck, fraktur, and circled letters. Copy the result and paste it anywhere — social media bios, messages, or posts.
The styles are real Unicode characters, not images or fonts, so they paste cleanly into Instagram bios, X posts, Discord nicknames, and YouTube descriptions. Some styles cover only A-Z and 0-9, while monospace and fullwidth pass through punctuation. Star the styles you actually use and the favourites view filters out the rest.
How to use
- Type or paste your text in the input field at the top.
- Scroll through the font styles — each one shows your text in a different Unicode format.
- Click the copy button next to any style to copy it to your clipboard, ready to paste anywhere.
When to use
- Standing out in a Twitter or Instagram bio where everyone else types in default sans.
- Faking bold or italic in messengers that strip Markdown (Discord nicknames, LinkedIn posts).
- Decorating section headers in a Notion page or Google Doc title that does not accept rich text.
Result
Type 'Hello World' and instantly see it in bold serif, cursive script, double-struck, fraktur, and circled styles ready to copy.
FAQ
- Will the fancy text show up correctly on every phone and computer?
- Most styles render on any modern OS because they are part of Unicode. Older Android devices and some Linux builds may show empty boxes for fraktur or double-struck letters if the system font is missing those glyphs.
- Why do my numbers or accents disappear in some styles?
- Several Unicode style blocks only define letters A through Z. Digits, punctuation, and accented characters fall back to the original text. Sans, monospace, and fullwidth are the most complete if you need digits.
- Is this readable by screen readers?
- No. Most assistive software reads each Unicode codepoint by name, so 'hello' in fraktur is announced as 'mathematical fraktur small h, e, l, l, o'. Avoid these styles in body content meant to be accessible.
- Can I use these styles in usernames?
- Some platforms accept them (Twitter display names, Discord nicknames, Telegram names). Others, like Instagram handles or email addresses, restrict you to plain ASCII and will reject the styled characters.
- Why does upside down or strikethrough look different from the other styles?
- Upside down uses letters that happen to look flipped (n for u, q for b) plus combining marks. Strikethrough and underline rely on combining characters layered on top of normal letters, so they can render unevenly in some apps.
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