Fancy Text Generator (Bold, Italic, Strikethrough)

Convert text to Unicode bold, italic, strikethrough, underline, monospace, double-struck styles. Copy and paste anywhere.

What is a Fancy Text Generator?

A Fancy Text Generator transforms ordinary letters into stylish Unicode variants like ๐๐จ๐ฅ๐, ๐ผ๐‘ก๐‘Ž๐‘™๐‘–๐‘, ๐“ข๐“ฌ๐“ป๐“ฒ๐“น๐“ฝ, ๐”‰๐”ฏ๐”ž๐”จ๐”ฑ๐”ฒ๐”ฏ, ๐•ฏ๐–”๐–š๐–‡๐–‘๐–Š-๐•พ๐–™๐–—๐–š๐–ˆ๐–, and dozens more. These are not images or fonts — they are actual Unicode characters from the Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols block (U+1D400 to U+1D7FF). Because they’re text, they paste anywhere: Instagram bio, TikTok username, Twitter/X profile, Discord nicknames, WhatsApp status, Facebook posts, YouTube channel names. No app or paid font needed — just copy and paste. Perfect for social media profiles, branded usernames, calligraphy aesthetics, eye-catching captions, and standing out in algorithm-saturated feeds.

How to use this tool

  1. Type your text — Any letters, numbers, or short phrase you want to style.
  2. Browse style variants — Bold, italic, bold italic, script, fraktur, double-struck, monospace, sans-serif, fullwidth, and more.
  3. Click to copy — Tap any style to copy that variant to clipboard.
  4. Paste anywhere — Instagram, Twitter, Discord, Word docs, anywhere that accepts Unicode (which is everywhere modern).

How Unicode styling works

Standard Latin letters live in the ASCII block (U+0041 ‘A’ to U+007A ‘z’). Unicode also defines parallel Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols — full alphabets in 10+ styles meant for mathematical notation but rendered universally.

  • Bold ‘A’ = ๐€ (U+1D400) — offset +119743 from regular ‘A’
  • Italic ‘a’ = ๐‘Ž (U+1D44E) — offset +119789
  • Script ‘A’ = ๐’œ (U+1D49C) — calligraphic style
  • Fraktur ‘A’ = ๐”„ (U+1D504) — old German blackletter
  • Double-struck ‘A’ = ๐”ธ (U+1D538) — outlined

The generator just maps each letter you type to the same letter in the chosen Unicode block. Result is real text characters that paste anywhere — not images, not custom fonts.

Examples

  • Instagram bio: ๐“œ๐“ช๐“ป๐“ด๐“ฎ๐“ฝ๐“ฒ๐“ท๐“ฐ ๐“’๐“ธ๐“ช๐“ฌ๐“ฑ โœจ — script style stands out vs plain text
  • YouTube channel name: ๐“๐ž๐œ๐ก ๐‘๐ž๐ฏ๐ข๐ž๐ฐ๐ฌ — bold for emphasis
  • Discord nickname: ๐•ฏ๐–†๐–—๐– ๐•ท๐–”๐–—๐–‰ — fraktur for gaming aesthetic
  • Twitter handle highlight: ๐”ธ๐•๐•–๐•ฉ โšก — double-struck looks cyberpunk
  • Wedding invite Instagram post: ๐’œ๐“๐’พ๐’ธ๐‘’ & ๐ต๐‘œ๐’ท — elegant calligraphy

Tips & best practices

  • Test in target app first — Apple’s San Francisco renders Unicode better than older Android system fonts
  • Don’t fancy-style your whole post — screen readers can’t always handle it. Use for headlines/usernames only
  • Instagram search may not index fancy text the same as plain — keep your main username readable
  • Combine styles strategically: bold for emphasis word, regular for the rest
  • Some Unicode characters don’t render on very old devices — preview before posting
  • Save your favorite styles — once you find a vibe, reuse it for brand consistency

Limitations & notes

Unicode fancy text is decorative only — accessibility tools (screen readers) may struggle. SEO tools see them as separate characters, not real words, so fancy headlines in blog titles hurt search rankings. Some platforms (LinkedIn business profiles) discourage fancy text in professional contexts. Numbers in some styles render incorrectly on older browsers — stick with bold/italic for numerals.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are these fonts or real text?

Real Unicode characters — not fonts. That’s why they paste into any app without needing to install anything. Each character has a unique code point recognized worldwide.

Why don’t all styles render on my phone?

Your device’s system font determines which Unicode blocks display. Modern iOS, Android, Windows handle most styles. Very old devices (pre-2018) may show boxes for rare blocks like Fraktur.

Will Instagram ban me for using fancy text?

No — fancy Unicode text is allowed everywhere. Instagram has no rule against it. Millions of accounts use it for bios and usernames.

Can I use this in passwords?

Don’t — most login systems strip non-ASCII characters or reject them outright. Passwords need plain ASCII for compatibility.

Why is the bold style longer when I count?

Each bold letter is a Unicode surrogate pair (2 UTF-16 code units) for characters above U+10000. Some tools count length wrong — the visual character is one, but byte count is higher.

Can I use fancy text in domain names?

No — domain names require ASCII (or Punycode-encoded IDN). Fancy Unicode would break URLs and email.

Does Google search index fancy text?

Yes but treats it as different words. Searches for ‘Marketing’ won’t match ‘๐“œ๐“ช๐“ป๐“ด๐“ฎ๐“ฝ๐“ฒ๐“ท๐“ฐ’. Bad for SEO in titles, fine for visual decoration only.

Related tools

Small Caps Generator · Upside Down Text · Text Case Converter

Copied