Turn plain text into fancy Discord fonts. Type once and get bold, italic, script, gothic, small caps, and more, each ready to copy.
Discord has no font setting, so these styles use unicode letters that read as different fonts. Paste them into a username, a bio, or any message.
Type to see fonts
Enter any text above and we turn it into bold, italic, script, and more. Tap copy to use it on Discord.
Jump to a single style with its own examples and tips.
Enter the word or phrase you want to style.
Browse the styles and find the look you want, from bold to script.
Copy the styled text and use it in your username, bio, or a message.
Discord has no setting to change your font. The app shows everything in its own typeface, so you cannot pick a font the way you would in a document. What looks like a custom font is really a set of unicode characters that happen to look like bold, italic, or cursive letters.
This generator swaps each letter you type for its unicode lookalike. The result is plain text you can paste anywhere that accepts normal characters. Discord does not treat it as special formatting, which is why it works in places that block markdown, like your username and your about me.
Type your text in the box above and the tool shows it in more than a hundred styles at once. Scroll until one fits the look you want, then tap copy. Paste it where you need it and send or save.
There is nothing to install and no account to make. Because the output is ordinary unicode, the same copied text works on the desktop app, the browser version, and the phone app with no changes.
Styled text is great for a display name, an about me, a status, or a message you want to stand out. Plenty of people use it for a server name or a channel name too.
The one spot to watch is the unique username, the handle with the lowercase letters. Discord limits that to lowercase letters, numbers, periods, and underscores, so most styles will not save there. Use your display name instead, which accepts the full range. If a style ever refuses to save, switch to a simpler one.
Yes. The output is standard unicode text, the same character set that emoji and accented letters come from. It does not run code, it cannot break your account, and it is within the rules.
The only real tradeoff is readability. Heavy styles are harder to read for some people, and they are not friendly to screen readers, so keep important information in plain text and save the decoration for flourish.
Each style maps to a specific block of unicode. Most modern phones and computers include those characters, but a few older devices do not, so a missing glyph shows as an empty box. If you see boxes in the preview, people on older devices may see them too.
When that matters, pick one of the common styles like bold, italic, or monospace. They have the widest support and render almost everywhere.
A light touch usually looks better than styling every word. Pick one accent style for your name and keep the rest readable, and your profile reads as put together rather than busy. Pair a font with a divider or a bio template for a finished look.
Discord does not support custom fonts, so the tool swaps your letters for unicode characters that look like other fonts. The result is plain text you can paste anywhere.
Yes. Copy a style and paste it into your username or display name. Some clients limit certain symbols, so preview it before you save.
Most do, since they are standard unicode. A few rare characters may show as empty boxes on older devices.
A handful of styles only cover letters, not digits or symbols, so anything they do not map stays as it is.
Yes. The output is normal unicode text. It will not break your profile, though heavy styling can be harder for others to read.