Comic Sans

1994Typeface / design meme / internet running jokeclassic

Also known as: Comic Sans MS

Comic Sans is a 1994 Microsoft typeface designed by Vincent Connare that became the internet's most mocked font, infamous for serious misuse and decades of typographic ridicule.

Comic Sans MS is a comic book-inspired typeface designed by Vincent Connare at Microsoft in 1994, originally meant for a children's software program called Microsoft Bob1. The font became one of the most widely used and widely hated typefaces in computing history, sparking the "Ban Comic Sans" movement in 20023 and fueling decades of internet mockery every time it appeared in a serious context. From CERN's Higgs boson presentation to an NBA owner's angry open letter, Comic Sans turned typography into a spectator sport.

TL;DR

Comic Sans MS is a comic book-inspired typeface designed by Vincent Connare at Microsoft in 1994, originally meant for a children's software program called Microsoft Bob.

Overview

Comic Sans MS is a sans-serif typeface with rounded, irregular letterforms designed to mimic the hand-lettered text found in comic books1. The letters are intentionally uneven: `p` is not a mirror image of `q`, spacing varies, and the overall feel is loose and childlike4. Microsoft officially describes it as "casual and legible"7.

The font's informal appearance made it wildly popular with everyday computer users in the late 1990s, but it also made it a target for designers who considered it inappropriate for anything beyond birthday invitations and children's materials5. This tension between mass appeal and professional disdain turned Comic Sans into a cultural flashpoint, one of the few typefaces that can reliably start an argument on the internet.

In 1994, Vincent Connare was working as a typographic engineer at Microsoft when he encountered a beta version of Microsoft Bob, a simplified interface aimed at novice computer users2. The program featured a cartoon dog named Rover who delivered helpful tips through speech bubbles, but all the text was set in Times New Roman1. Connare thought the formal serif font clashed badly with the cartoonish illustrations.

He grabbed two comic books from his desk, Frank Miller's *The Dark Knight Returns* (lettered by John Costanza) and Alan Moore's *Watchmen* (lettered by Dave Gibbons), and began drawing letterforms inspired by their hand-lettered styles7. Using Macromedia Fontographer, he drew each character with rounded corners and a mouse cursor, printing test sheets to match the weight of typical comic book lettering1.

There was a problem. Connare's font was physically larger than Times New Roman, and Microsoft Bob's dialog boxes were already sized for the original font's metrics1. The software shipped without Comic Sans. The typeface found its first home in Microsoft 3D Movie Maker, a 1995 children's animation program that used cartoon characters and speech bubbles20. From there, it was bundled into the Windows 95 Plus! Pack, then added to the OEM version of Windows 95, and eventually became a default font in Microsoft Publisher and Internet Explorer7.

"Comic Sans was NOT designed as a typeface but as a solution to a problem," Connare later wrote on his personal site. "There was no intention to include the font in other applications other than those designed for children"1.

Origin & Background

Platform
Microsoft (Windows 95 Plus! Pack)
Creator
Vincent Connare
Date
1994
Year
1994

In 1994, Vincent Connare was working as a typographic engineer at Microsoft when he encountered a beta version of Microsoft Bob, a simplified interface aimed at novice computer users. The program featured a cartoon dog named Rover who delivered helpful tips through speech bubbles, but all the text was set in Times New Roman. Connare thought the formal serif font clashed badly with the cartoonish illustrations.

He grabbed two comic books from his desk, Frank Miller's *The Dark Knight Returns* (lettered by John Costanza) and Alan Moore's *Watchmen* (lettered by Dave Gibbons), and began drawing letterforms inspired by their hand-lettered styles. Using Macromedia Fontographer, he drew each character with rounded corners and a mouse cursor, printing test sheets to match the weight of typical comic book lettering.

There was a problem. Connare's font was physically larger than Times New Roman, and Microsoft Bob's dialog boxes were already sized for the original font's metrics. The software shipped without Comic Sans. The typeface found its first home in Microsoft 3D Movie Maker, a 1995 children's animation program that used cartoon characters and speech bubbles. From there, it was bundled into the Windows 95 Plus! Pack, then added to the OEM version of Windows 95, and eventually became a default font in Microsoft Publisher and Internet Explorer.

"Comic Sans was NOT designed as a typeface but as a solution to a problem," Connare later wrote on his personal site. "There was no intention to include the font in other applications other than those designed for children".

How It Spread

Once Comic Sans shipped with Windows, it spread fast. In the late 1990s, it appeared on personal Geocities and Angelfire pages, on Beanie Babies tags, in The Sims, and on the 2004 Canada Day 25-cent collector coin. A Flickr group called "Comic Sans" launched in March 2005, collecting examples of the font spotted in the wild and hosting heated debates about its merits.

The backlash was just as swift. In September 2002, Indianapolis graphic designers Dave and Holly Combs launched the "Ban Comic Sans" campaign after a former employer insisted they use the font for a children's museum exhibit. They built a website, wrote a manifesto comparing Comic Sans to "showing up for a black-tie event in a clown costume," and sold stickers, T-shirts, and mugs. The Wall Street Journal covered the font controversy in 2009, running a front-page article that became the paper's most-read and most-emailed story for several days. The BBC and The Independent both weighed in during 2010.

Online culture ran with the joke. A CollegeHumor video imagined a "font conference" where Comic Sans showed up as a cape-wearing superhero. Parody sites like "Comic Sans Criminal" catalogued inappropriate uses. AgencyFusion built a game called "Kill Comic Sans". And in 2010, Mike Lacher published "I'm Comic Sans, Asshole" on McSweeney's, a profanity-laced first-person monologue from the font's perspective that became a viral hit: "I am a sans-serif Superman and my only kryptonite is pretentious buzzkills like you".

How to Use This Meme

Comic Sans is typically deployed in one of two modes: sincere or ironic.

Sincere use follows the font's original purpose. People pick it for children's party invitations, classroom handouts, informal signs, and personal projects where a friendly, handwritten feel is appropriate. It works best in short bursts: headlines, speech bubbles, sticky-note reminders.

Ironic/meme use involves deliberately choosing Comic Sans for serious or formal contexts to provoke a reaction. Common applications include: - Writing corporate emails or professional documents in Comic Sans to annoy coworkers - Posting memes with Comic Sans text as a layer of anti-humor - Using it in presentations to signal that you don't take the format too seriously - Creating passive-aggressive office notes (a well-documented genre)

The meme value comes from the gap between the font's childlike tone and whatever serious content it's paired with. The more solemn the context, the funnier the Comic Sans.

Cultural Impact

Comic Sans is one of the only typefaces to generate sustained mainstream news coverage. The Wall Street Journal ran a front-page story on it in 2009. The BBC, The Independent, CNN, Time, and The Guardian have all published pieces analyzing why people hate it. Simon Garfield devoted significant attention to the font in his 2010 book *Just My Type*.

The font has appeared in several high-profile political and institutional contexts. In October 2012, a Dutch World War II memorial called *Verzoening* ("Reconciliation") used Comic Sans for the inscribed names of Jewish, Allied, and German military dead. The names were scraped off after complaints, but the replacement text was once again set in Comic Sans. In 2014, the Sydney Morning Herald printed a front page in Comic Sans, though notably within speech bubbles. In 2019, former Trump attorney John Dowd sent a letter to the House Intelligence Committee printed in Comic Sans during the first Trump impeachment inquiry.

Studies and dyslexia specialists have found that Comic Sans' uneven letterforms can improve readability for people with dyslexia, giving the font an unlikely second life as an accessibility tool.

Full History

Comic Sans' journey from obscure children's software font to global design villain took about five years. After its quiet debut in 3D Movie Maker and Windows 95, it spread through the late-1990s web boom as one of the few playful options in a limited font menu. At a time when most computer text looked like a tax form, Comic Sans felt approachable. Tom Stephens, who worked alongside Connare in Microsoft's typography unit, later explained the appeal: "When you use Comic Sans, you're making a statement: 'I'm more relaxed, more creative'".

The problem was that people used it for everything. Funeral announcements. Museum signage. Medical warnings. Ambulance lettering. By the early 2000s, the font's cheerful informality was showing up in contexts that made designers physically uncomfortable. The Combs' "Ban Comic Sans" campaign gave this frustration a home, and the website drew enough traffic to attract international media attention.

The font's reputation as a punchline locked in during 2010, when two high-profile incidents cemented it in internet lore. On July 8, Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert posted an open letter to fans after LeBron James announced he was leaving for the Miami Heat. The letter was furious, full of capital letters and scare quotes, and it was written entirely in Comic Sans. On Twitter, "Comic Sans" briefly trended higher than "LeBron James". CNN, the Washington Post, and ESPN all covered the font choice alongside the basketball news. Time magazine noted that Gilbert's letter read like "a middle-school breakup letter" and that "Comic Sans needs to be said twice".

Two years later, on July 4, 2012, CERN scientists announced the likely discovery of the Higgs boson, one of the biggest physics breakthroughs in decades. Physicist Fabiola Gianotti delivered the results in a PowerPoint presentation set in Comic Sans. Twitter erupted. "Dear @CERN," one user wrote, "every time you use Comic Sans on a powerpoint, God kills the Schrödinger's cat". Within an hour, "Comic Sans" was trending higher than "God Particle" on Twitter. Even Connare seemed to agree it was an odd choice, tweeting a gentle jab at the slides. But Harvard physicist Lisa Randall, after emailing Gianotti to ask why, got a simple answer: "Because I like it".

The Guardian's design writer offered a counterpoint, arguing that Comic Sans' high legibility made it a reasonable choice for dense scientific content and that tests had shown it helped readers process complex information. This accessibility angle gained traction. Dyslexia specialists had already been using Comic Sans for years because its irregular letterforms made individual characters easier to distinguish. The font that designers loved to mock was quietly doing useful work in classrooms.

In 2013, the Vatican posted a 62-page digital photo album celebrating the retirement of Pope Benedict XVI, with every caption set in Comic Sans. Mashable described it as looking "like something out of late-90s Geocities". That same year, Google's 2011 April Fools' joke resurfaced in conversations: the search engine had turned all results for "Helvetica" into Comic Sans, a gag that typographers found both hilarious and infuriating.

The font received an official update in 2011 when Monotype designer Terrance Weinzierl created Comic Sans Pro, adding italic variants, small capitals, speech bubble ornaments, and other extras. It was released on April Fools' Day, causing some to assume it was a joke. Weinzierl later described the project as showing off new OpenType features in Microsoft Office 2010.

By 2019, the culture war over Comic Sans began to cool. Dave Combs redirected his "Ban Comic Sans" domain to a "Use Comic Sans" campaign, saying the original antagonism had "gotten out of hand" and that he'd grown fond of the font "like an ugly dog". In March 2023, British culture magazine The Face printed an entire issue in a Comic Sans variation, including its nameplate, interviews, and fashion spreads. And Connare himself never lost sleep over the backlash. He told The Atlantic that Comic Sans was "the best joke I've ever told" and told the Wall Street Journal: "If you love it, you don't know much about typography. If you hate it, you really don't know much about typography, either, and you should get another hobby".

Fun Facts

Connare originally had to name his test font "Times New Roman" just to get Microsoft Bob's team to try it, because the software only accepted that font name in its codebase.

The "MS" in Comic Sans MS stands for Microsoft, not "manuscript" as some assume.

An encrypted copy of Microsoft Bob (the program Comic Sans was designed for) was hidden on Windows XP installation CDs as anti-piracy bloat, consuming 30 MB to discourage dial-up users from downloading it illegally.

Comic Sans is pre-installed on macOS and Windows but not on Android, iOS, or Linux.

Connare's inspiration came from two of the most acclaimed graphic novels ever published: *Watchmen* and *The Dark Knight Returns*. The irony of a "childish" font born from grim, adult comics is not lost on typography nerds.

Derivatives & Variations

"Ban Comic Sans" campaign (2002):

Dave and Holly Combs' satirical movement with merchandise, a manifesto, and a website that ran for nearly two decades before pivoting to "Use Comic Sans" in 2019[3].

"I'm Comic Sans, Asshole" (2010):

Mike Lacher's McSweeney's piece, a first-person rant from the font's perspective that went viral[9].

"Kill Comic Sans" game:

AgencyFusion created a browser game where players could destroy the font[3].

Google "Helvetica" Easter egg (2011):

Googling "Helvetica" on April Fools' Day 2011 rendered all results in Comic Sans[14].

Comic Sans Pro (2011):

Monotype's Terrance Weinzierl expanded the font with italics, small caps, and dingbats for Microsoft Office 2010[8].

Comic Sans Criminal website:

A parody documentation project collecting real-world examples of Comic Sans misuse[3].

The Face magazine issue (2023):

The British culture magazine printed an entire issue in a Comic Sans variation as a deliberate provocation[4].

Frequently Asked Questions

References (36)

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    Comic Sansencyclopedia
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Comic Sans

1994Typeface / design meme / internet running jokeclassic

Also known as: Comic Sans MS

Comic Sans is a 1994 Microsoft typeface designed by Vincent Connare that became the internet's most mocked font, infamous for serious misuse and decades of typographic ridicule.

Comic Sans MS is a comic book-inspired typeface designed by Vincent Connare at Microsoft in 1994, originally meant for a children's software program called Microsoft Bob. The font became one of the most widely used and widely hated typefaces in computing history, sparking the "Ban Comic Sans" movement in 2002 and fueling decades of internet mockery every time it appeared in a serious context. From CERN's Higgs boson presentation to an NBA owner's angry open letter, Comic Sans turned typography into a spectator sport.

TL;DR

Comic Sans MS is a comic book-inspired typeface designed by Vincent Connare at Microsoft in 1994, originally meant for a children's software program called Microsoft Bob.

Overview

Comic Sans MS is a sans-serif typeface with rounded, irregular letterforms designed to mimic the hand-lettered text found in comic books. The letters are intentionally uneven: `p` is not a mirror image of `q`, spacing varies, and the overall feel is loose and childlike. Microsoft officially describes it as "casual and legible".

The font's informal appearance made it wildly popular with everyday computer users in the late 1990s, but it also made it a target for designers who considered it inappropriate for anything beyond birthday invitations and children's materials. This tension between mass appeal and professional disdain turned Comic Sans into a cultural flashpoint, one of the few typefaces that can reliably start an argument on the internet.

In 1994, Vincent Connare was working as a typographic engineer at Microsoft when he encountered a beta version of Microsoft Bob, a simplified interface aimed at novice computer users. The program featured a cartoon dog named Rover who delivered helpful tips through speech bubbles, but all the text was set in Times New Roman. Connare thought the formal serif font clashed badly with the cartoonish illustrations.

He grabbed two comic books from his desk, Frank Miller's *The Dark Knight Returns* (lettered by John Costanza) and Alan Moore's *Watchmen* (lettered by Dave Gibbons), and began drawing letterforms inspired by their hand-lettered styles. Using Macromedia Fontographer, he drew each character with rounded corners and a mouse cursor, printing test sheets to match the weight of typical comic book lettering.

There was a problem. Connare's font was physically larger than Times New Roman, and Microsoft Bob's dialog boxes were already sized for the original font's metrics. The software shipped without Comic Sans. The typeface found its first home in Microsoft 3D Movie Maker, a 1995 children's animation program that used cartoon characters and speech bubbles. From there, it was bundled into the Windows 95 Plus! Pack, then added to the OEM version of Windows 95, and eventually became a default font in Microsoft Publisher and Internet Explorer.

"Comic Sans was NOT designed as a typeface but as a solution to a problem," Connare later wrote on his personal site. "There was no intention to include the font in other applications other than those designed for children".

Origin & Background

Platform
Microsoft (Windows 95 Plus! Pack)
Creator
Vincent Connare
Date
1994
Year
1994

In 1994, Vincent Connare was working as a typographic engineer at Microsoft when he encountered a beta version of Microsoft Bob, a simplified interface aimed at novice computer users. The program featured a cartoon dog named Rover who delivered helpful tips through speech bubbles, but all the text was set in Times New Roman. Connare thought the formal serif font clashed badly with the cartoonish illustrations.

He grabbed two comic books from his desk, Frank Miller's *The Dark Knight Returns* (lettered by John Costanza) and Alan Moore's *Watchmen* (lettered by Dave Gibbons), and began drawing letterforms inspired by their hand-lettered styles. Using Macromedia Fontographer, he drew each character with rounded corners and a mouse cursor, printing test sheets to match the weight of typical comic book lettering.

There was a problem. Connare's font was physically larger than Times New Roman, and Microsoft Bob's dialog boxes were already sized for the original font's metrics. The software shipped without Comic Sans. The typeface found its first home in Microsoft 3D Movie Maker, a 1995 children's animation program that used cartoon characters and speech bubbles. From there, it was bundled into the Windows 95 Plus! Pack, then added to the OEM version of Windows 95, and eventually became a default font in Microsoft Publisher and Internet Explorer.

"Comic Sans was NOT designed as a typeface but as a solution to a problem," Connare later wrote on his personal site. "There was no intention to include the font in other applications other than those designed for children".

How It Spread

Once Comic Sans shipped with Windows, it spread fast. In the late 1990s, it appeared on personal Geocities and Angelfire pages, on Beanie Babies tags, in The Sims, and on the 2004 Canada Day 25-cent collector coin. A Flickr group called "Comic Sans" launched in March 2005, collecting examples of the font spotted in the wild and hosting heated debates about its merits.

The backlash was just as swift. In September 2002, Indianapolis graphic designers Dave and Holly Combs launched the "Ban Comic Sans" campaign after a former employer insisted they use the font for a children's museum exhibit. They built a website, wrote a manifesto comparing Comic Sans to "showing up for a black-tie event in a clown costume," and sold stickers, T-shirts, and mugs. The Wall Street Journal covered the font controversy in 2009, running a front-page article that became the paper's most-read and most-emailed story for several days. The BBC and The Independent both weighed in during 2010.

Online culture ran with the joke. A CollegeHumor video imagined a "font conference" where Comic Sans showed up as a cape-wearing superhero. Parody sites like "Comic Sans Criminal" catalogued inappropriate uses. AgencyFusion built a game called "Kill Comic Sans". And in 2010, Mike Lacher published "I'm Comic Sans, Asshole" on McSweeney's, a profanity-laced first-person monologue from the font's perspective that became a viral hit: "I am a sans-serif Superman and my only kryptonite is pretentious buzzkills like you".

How to Use This Meme

Comic Sans is typically deployed in one of two modes: sincere or ironic.

Sincere use follows the font's original purpose. People pick it for children's party invitations, classroom handouts, informal signs, and personal projects where a friendly, handwritten feel is appropriate. It works best in short bursts: headlines, speech bubbles, sticky-note reminders.

Ironic/meme use involves deliberately choosing Comic Sans for serious or formal contexts to provoke a reaction. Common applications include: - Writing corporate emails or professional documents in Comic Sans to annoy coworkers - Posting memes with Comic Sans text as a layer of anti-humor - Using it in presentations to signal that you don't take the format too seriously - Creating passive-aggressive office notes (a well-documented genre)

The meme value comes from the gap between the font's childlike tone and whatever serious content it's paired with. The more solemn the context, the funnier the Comic Sans.

Cultural Impact

Comic Sans is one of the only typefaces to generate sustained mainstream news coverage. The Wall Street Journal ran a front-page story on it in 2009. The BBC, The Independent, CNN, Time, and The Guardian have all published pieces analyzing why people hate it. Simon Garfield devoted significant attention to the font in his 2010 book *Just My Type*.

The font has appeared in several high-profile political and institutional contexts. In October 2012, a Dutch World War II memorial called *Verzoening* ("Reconciliation") used Comic Sans for the inscribed names of Jewish, Allied, and German military dead. The names were scraped off after complaints, but the replacement text was once again set in Comic Sans. In 2014, the Sydney Morning Herald printed a front page in Comic Sans, though notably within speech bubbles. In 2019, former Trump attorney John Dowd sent a letter to the House Intelligence Committee printed in Comic Sans during the first Trump impeachment inquiry.

Studies and dyslexia specialists have found that Comic Sans' uneven letterforms can improve readability for people with dyslexia, giving the font an unlikely second life as an accessibility tool.

Full History

Comic Sans' journey from obscure children's software font to global design villain took about five years. After its quiet debut in 3D Movie Maker and Windows 95, it spread through the late-1990s web boom as one of the few playful options in a limited font menu. At a time when most computer text looked like a tax form, Comic Sans felt approachable. Tom Stephens, who worked alongside Connare in Microsoft's typography unit, later explained the appeal: "When you use Comic Sans, you're making a statement: 'I'm more relaxed, more creative'".

The problem was that people used it for everything. Funeral announcements. Museum signage. Medical warnings. Ambulance lettering. By the early 2000s, the font's cheerful informality was showing up in contexts that made designers physically uncomfortable. The Combs' "Ban Comic Sans" campaign gave this frustration a home, and the website drew enough traffic to attract international media attention.

The font's reputation as a punchline locked in during 2010, when two high-profile incidents cemented it in internet lore. On July 8, Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert posted an open letter to fans after LeBron James announced he was leaving for the Miami Heat. The letter was furious, full of capital letters and scare quotes, and it was written entirely in Comic Sans. On Twitter, "Comic Sans" briefly trended higher than "LeBron James". CNN, the Washington Post, and ESPN all covered the font choice alongside the basketball news. Time magazine noted that Gilbert's letter read like "a middle-school breakup letter" and that "Comic Sans needs to be said twice".

Two years later, on July 4, 2012, CERN scientists announced the likely discovery of the Higgs boson, one of the biggest physics breakthroughs in decades. Physicist Fabiola Gianotti delivered the results in a PowerPoint presentation set in Comic Sans. Twitter erupted. "Dear @CERN," one user wrote, "every time you use Comic Sans on a powerpoint, God kills the Schrödinger's cat". Within an hour, "Comic Sans" was trending higher than "God Particle" on Twitter. Even Connare seemed to agree it was an odd choice, tweeting a gentle jab at the slides. But Harvard physicist Lisa Randall, after emailing Gianotti to ask why, got a simple answer: "Because I like it".

The Guardian's design writer offered a counterpoint, arguing that Comic Sans' high legibility made it a reasonable choice for dense scientific content and that tests had shown it helped readers process complex information. This accessibility angle gained traction. Dyslexia specialists had already been using Comic Sans for years because its irregular letterforms made individual characters easier to distinguish. The font that designers loved to mock was quietly doing useful work in classrooms.

In 2013, the Vatican posted a 62-page digital photo album celebrating the retirement of Pope Benedict XVI, with every caption set in Comic Sans. Mashable described it as looking "like something out of late-90s Geocities". That same year, Google's 2011 April Fools' joke resurfaced in conversations: the search engine had turned all results for "Helvetica" into Comic Sans, a gag that typographers found both hilarious and infuriating.

The font received an official update in 2011 when Monotype designer Terrance Weinzierl created Comic Sans Pro, adding italic variants, small capitals, speech bubble ornaments, and other extras. It was released on April Fools' Day, causing some to assume it was a joke. Weinzierl later described the project as showing off new OpenType features in Microsoft Office 2010.

By 2019, the culture war over Comic Sans began to cool. Dave Combs redirected his "Ban Comic Sans" domain to a "Use Comic Sans" campaign, saying the original antagonism had "gotten out of hand" and that he'd grown fond of the font "like an ugly dog". In March 2023, British culture magazine The Face printed an entire issue in a Comic Sans variation, including its nameplate, interviews, and fashion spreads. And Connare himself never lost sleep over the backlash. He told The Atlantic that Comic Sans was "the best joke I've ever told" and told the Wall Street Journal: "If you love it, you don't know much about typography. If you hate it, you really don't know much about typography, either, and you should get another hobby".

Fun Facts

Connare originally had to name his test font "Times New Roman" just to get Microsoft Bob's team to try it, because the software only accepted that font name in its codebase.

The "MS" in Comic Sans MS stands for Microsoft, not "manuscript" as some assume.

An encrypted copy of Microsoft Bob (the program Comic Sans was designed for) was hidden on Windows XP installation CDs as anti-piracy bloat, consuming 30 MB to discourage dial-up users from downloading it illegally.

Comic Sans is pre-installed on macOS and Windows but not on Android, iOS, or Linux.

Connare's inspiration came from two of the most acclaimed graphic novels ever published: *Watchmen* and *The Dark Knight Returns*. The irony of a "childish" font born from grim, adult comics is not lost on typography nerds.

Derivatives & Variations

"Ban Comic Sans" campaign (2002):

Dave and Holly Combs' satirical movement with merchandise, a manifesto, and a website that ran for nearly two decades before pivoting to "Use Comic Sans" in 2019[3].

"I'm Comic Sans, Asshole" (2010):

Mike Lacher's McSweeney's piece, a first-person rant from the font's perspective that went viral[9].

"Kill Comic Sans" game:

AgencyFusion created a browser game where players could destroy the font[3].

Google "Helvetica" Easter egg (2011):

Googling "Helvetica" on April Fools' Day 2011 rendered all results in Comic Sans[14].

Comic Sans Pro (2011):

Monotype's Terrance Weinzierl expanded the font with italics, small caps, and dingbats for Microsoft Office 2010[8].

Comic Sans Criminal website:

A parody documentation project collecting real-world examples of Comic Sans misuse[3].

The Face magazine issue (2023):

The British culture magazine printed an entire issue in a Comic Sans variation as a deliberate provocation[4].

Frequently Asked Questions

References (36)

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
    Comic Sansencyclopedia
  6. 6
  7. 7
    Microsoft Bobencyclopedia
  8. 8
    3D Movie Makerencyclopedia
  9. 9
  10. 10
  11. 11
  12. 12
  13. 13
  14. 14
  15. 15
    connarearticle
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    Untitledarticle
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  36. 36