I was going to make a post on unpopular opinions saying comic sans is not as bad as people make it out to be and can be useful in some cases since it is easier to read. But decided not to because I wasnt sure kbin/lemmy felt about it.
It’s acceptable in the following contexts:
- In a comic
- In content designed for children
That’s pretty much it.
No no no no.
It’s also acceptable for presidential speeches. The funny letters have a way of calming the elderly.
Did it actually get used in a presidential speech? That is pretty wild.
Oh…no no no. I’m not saying it did or didn’t happen. I like to make absurd jokes, and I keep forgetting that this whole world has taken the absurdity meter, and cranked it up to 327 on a scale of 1-10.
At this point, I could say that Bill Cosby was giving head to hobos in exchange for jello-pops, and with how absurd this world is, I’d be then asked “Which flavor was it???”
See, when I grew up, if I had said something like that, I’d be laughed out of the serious conversation. It was just so absurd it’s funny…except now we live in a timeline where Rudy Guilliani’s hair melts, Mike Pence is known to have a fly crawl in his mouth without noticing or reacting for hours, every superpower seems to be plotting their own WWIII, and Apu from the Simpsons is taken seriously as a social progressive commentary.
I swear when I was a kid, sci-fi was all about time travelers coming back from the year 2020 to warn of us alien invasions, and robot takeovers, and governments running big brother programs…
And while all that IS true, you never saw any sci-fi movies in the 80s like “THE FUTURE IS STUPID!!! REALLY REALLY STUPID!!!” and then runs away.
I blame Harambe. Thats when the absurdity levels fell off the rails.
Don’t mind the crayons
It’s apparently pretty dyslexic-friendly
As are many other sans serif typefaces.
Comic Sans is better than other sans serif options because letters like b, p, d, and q are more rotationally distinct
According to research, the space between letters is more important for people with reading disabilities than rotational distinction.
Typefaces may affect web accessibility, but if you want to provide a better experience for readers, Comic Sans isn’t the only option. The best practice is to use a widely available font with no extra decorations or flourishes.
In addition to Comic Sans, the British Dyslexia Association recommends Arial, Verdana, Tahoma, Century Gothic, Trebuchet, Calibri, and Open Sans.
https://www.boia.org/blog/does-comic-sans-benefit-people-with-dyslexia
People with disabilities really ought to respect your font choices.
So a comic made for children would be the best context for it?
The monospaced version is the best terminal font I’ve ever used. I can find information on the screen way faster.
Yes! I came here to shill for Comic Mono! I don’t use any other monospace fonts since I started with it.
wtf I kinda love this. Thanks for sharing!
Comic Code is also great
I don’t really use it for anything. Though I imagine it would would make it easier to read having comic sans in white on a dark terminal.
I use monospaced comic sans for programming. The font is just easier on the eyes.
Right tools for the right jobs. The issues arise when it’s out of place.
I very much associate it with the kind of person in the corporate environment who says things like “does somebody have a case of the Mondays?”
I think that it’s a pretty decent typeface – it looks decent and successfully evokes comic book text. But because Microsoft bundled it with its OS, where it was one of the few distinct-looking typefaces, it became overused, got put in a lot of material where it wasn’t really a great choice.
But I won’t blame the typeface for people using it in inappropriate spots.
I used to have a number of typefaces used for various things, but I kind of stopped messing around with decorative fonts once I wanted wide Unicode support.
It’s aight. Just use it for the right stuff, is all.
I get why people use it, but it looks childish.
It doesn’t bother me at all. It’s readable and fun, but I like comics so…. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
If you use it while trying to write a paper, you can actually write faster/more easily, so I tried it out myself, switched the font, and it actually did help. I do switch the font back to something more professional if I’m sharing what I wrote, though.
It helps me read better as someone with dyslexia, I hate the look but it’s useful. I use open dyslexic but it’s basically Comic Sans.
Meh. Usage is cringe, but so is the hate.
Keep that font out of your damned mouth! 😂
I don’t think it’s that bad. What matters is that the message can be read.
True a font that is hard to read isn’t very good especially if you are dyslexic.
^ Something that annoys me to no end. I don’t have dyslexia but find handwritings hard to read, and for similar reasons I always write in print, but then I go consult people who write things if there’s a project or I need something written, and nine out of ten times it’s in cursive when it’s not even a formal document, and I’m thinking “is it SO hard for normal people to write in a normal manner and write for understandability instead of bad aesthetics/tradition”. Yet I’m called illiterate because I only write in print.
I used it for its true purpose back in the day, for Microsoft Comic Chat.
It’s like almost nobody remembers that … that’s a thing that existed.
We tend to suppress traumatic memories, like freeing up lower ram with himem.sys and friends to load Novell NetWare network drivers.
Dear God, it’s all coming back to me! 😭
I remember figuring out a 10-Base-T network to get LAN Quake running, and dealing with Himem.sys and things like Sound cards needing to be put on IRQ 11 or IRQ 13 because they wouldn’t work anywhere else.
Yep, we’re officially old.
Have you ever read really dense technical material in comic sans? It’s awesome, I recommend it