Bubble Text
Convert letters and digits into Ⓤⓝⓘⓒⓞⓓⓔ Ⓑⓤⓑⓑⓛⓔ ⓣⓔⓧⓣ — circled enclosed-alphanumerics.
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About Bubble Text
Bubble text maps ASCII letters and digits to the Unicode 'Enclosed Alphanumerics' block (U+2460–U+24FF) — characters that render with a circle drawn around each glyph. The result has a playful, retro look popular in usernames, headlines, and decorative text.
When to use it
- Creating attention-grabbing usernames or display names
- Decorating headers in chat or social media
- Producing fun callouts in graphic design mock-ups
- Adding a vintage typewriter-circle vibe to text
How it works
Each uppercase letter A–Z maps to its enclosed-circle form (Ⓐ–Ⓩ, starting at U+24B6). Lowercase letters a–z map to U+24D0–U+24E9. Digits 1–9 map to ①–⑨ (U+2460+), and 0 maps to ⓪ (U+24EA). Other characters pass through unchanged.
Examples
Letters and digits become bubble-style glyphs
Hello World 123
Ⓗⓔⓛⓛⓞ Ⓦⓞⓡⓛⓓ ①②③
Frequently asked questions
- Will it render in every app?
- Most modern apps render the enclosed alphanumerics correctly because they're in the Basic Multilingual Plane. Older terminals and some embedded systems may show boxes.
- Is it accessible?
- No. Screen readers narrate each character by its Unicode name ('circled latin small letter h'), which is unintelligible. Use only for decoration.
- Why doesn't 0 look like the other digits?
- U+24EA (⓪) was added to Unicode later than U+2460–U+2468 (①–⑨), and many fonts render it with a slightly different stroke weight. The shapes are intentionally consistent in modern fonts but vary historically.