Corrupted Blackletter

Metal album covers. Tattoo flash sheets. Game title screens. Underground zines. Streetwear graphics. Horror movie posters. Dark fantasy book covers. Anywhere the medieval and the glitched share the same aesthetic DNA — Corvinix belongs there.

It’s blackletter filtered through an 8-bit screen. Gothic textura broken into pixels, every stroke grid-locked, every curve reduced to deliberate steps. The result sits somewhere between a medieval manuscript and a corrupted ROM file — retro, raw, and oddly readable.

The name nods to Matthias Corvinus, the Renaissance king whose library once held the finest illuminated codices in Europe — most of them lost, scattered, or burned before anyone could make a backup.

Originally drawn in 2006, rebuilt in 2026. Twenty years of pixel decay, still standing.

Corvinix supports Latin Extended character sets, including Central and Northern European languages — Hungarian, Swedish, Polish, Czech, and more.

Corvinix

Done in: v.1 09.2006 and v2. 04.2026 | by Amondo Szegi | Customer: MyFonts | single weight font