About
About WordCraft
A small studio of text tools for fancy Unicode styles, word and character counts, casing conversions, punctuation checks, and the novelty translators that show up in every social bio of the last decade.
By The WordCraft Editors · 2026
Where WordCraft started
WordCraft started with a single observation: people copy fancy text from sketchy “Unicode fancy text generator” sites every day, and most of those sites bury the copy button under three pop-ups and a newsletter modal. The tools themselves are not the hard part — Unicode 15 already contains the mathematical alphanumeric blocks, the regional indicator symbols, the small caps, and the strikethrough combining marks that power those generators. The problem is delivery: clean preview, big copy button, no friction.
The tool cluster
The fancy-text generator covers cursive (script and italic script), bold and bold italic, monospace, sans serif, double-struck, fraktur, small caps, fullwidth, glitch (combining-mark zalgo), strikethrough, underline, and a handful of decorative borders. The writing utilities cover word count, character count, line count, reading-time estimation, case conversion (lower, UPPER, Title, Sentence, camelCase, snake_case, kebab-case), and a punctuation/whitespace checker. The novelty translators include Morse code, binary, and a few playful conversions used in word games and prompts. Programmatic platform pages stitch a fancy-text style to a target platform (Instagram, TikTok, Twitter/X, Discord, Roblox) and explain which styles render cleanly in that platform’s text field.
A note on Unicode compatibility
Fancy text is not always portable. Mathematical alphanumeric characters render well on iOS, Android, and modern desktop browsers but may flatten back to plain Latin in older email clients or in screen-reader output. Combining marks (glitch text) can be rejected by platforms that strict-validate Unicode normalization. Each fancy-text style on WordCraft includes a short compatibility note so you know whether the style is safe for a profile bio, a caption, or a private message before pasting it into a launch announcement.
Who maintains WordCraft
WordCraft is published by the inovisum team, a small tools studio. New Unicode releases (annual) are reviewed for character blocks that could power additional styles, and platform-compatibility notes are refreshed as Instagram, TikTok, X, and Discord update their text-rendering pipelines. If a style copied from WordCraft renders incorrectly on the platform you tried it on, write in with the platform and OS and the issue will be triaged on the next maintenance pass.