Any file. Any shape.

Fancy Text Generator

Type once — copy your text in ten Unicode styles that survive Instagram, X and Discord.

How Unicode text styling works

Social networks strip real formatting: paste bold text into an Instagram bio or an X post and it arrives plain. This generator sidesteps that by not using formatting at all — each letter is replaced with a Unicode character that already looks the part: mathematical sans-serif letters for 𝗯𝗼𝗹𝗱 and 𝘪𝘵𝘢𝘭𝘪𝘤, combining marks for s̶t̶r̶i̶k̶e̶t̶h̶r̶o̶u̶g̶h̶ and u̲n̲d̲e̲r̲l̲i̲n̲e̲, dedicated blocks for ˢᵘᵖᵉʳˢᶜʳⁱᵖᵗ, subscript, ꜱᴍᴀʟʟ ᴄᴀᴘꜱ, fullwidth text and Ⓑⓤⓑⓑⓛⓔ letters, plus a flipped-and-reversed map for upside-down text. The output is an ordinary string, so it survives every copy-paste.

Everything runs in your browser — nothing you type is sent anywhere. Being upfront about the limits: these are lookalike characters, not styled letters. A few platforms with older fonts may render an odd character as a box, in-page search will not match styled words against regular ones, and screen readers may spell them out letter-by-letter. Unicode also lacks some superscript/subscript letters entirely — those stay unstyled rather than being faked. Perfect for names, bios and short posts; for long body text, use real formatting.

FAQ

Is this a font? Do readers need anything installed?

No — the generator replaces each letter with a Unicode character that already looks bold, struck through, circled and so on (mathematical alphanumeric symbols and combining marks). The result is plain text: anyone with a modern system font sees it correctly, nothing needs installing.

Where can I paste the styled text?

Anywhere plain text is accepted but formatting is stripped: Instagram bios and captions, X/Twitter names and posts, Discord and WhatsApp messages, YouTube comments, Telegram, LinkedIn, even file names. That is exactly the niche these Unicode styles exist for.

Why are some letters left unstyled in superscript or subscript?

Unicode does not define superscript/subscript forms for every letter — there is no superscript "q" and no subscript "b", for example. Missing letters are kept as-is instead of being replaced with a wrong lookalike.

Is styled text accessible?

Partially — screen readers often announce these characters letter-by-letter or by their technical names, so use styled text for decoration (a name, a short bio line), not for long passages people must read with assistive technology.