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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.

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