Brewer Cipher

Georg Brewer
Georg Brewer

Greetings

[Greetings]

Kryptonian in the Comics

2000 to Present

In 2000, DC Comics released a substitution font for Kryptonian (available on the downloads page) which they began using in their comic books to depict the Kryptonian language. The font was designed by design Director Georg Brewer, with input from DC’s Superman office and had a similar style and feel to the random geomtric symbols used by John Byrne to depict Kryptonian beginning 1986.

It is important to understand, though, that this is not a language. Rather, it is just a different way of depicting whatever the language of publication might be (e.g., English, French, Spanish, etc.). This is what is known as a cipher or a substituion font.

Byrne's shapes in the comics

A Brief Note on John Byrnes

1986 to 2000

In 1986, Superman got a reboot with Crisis on Infinite Earths. John Byrne re-envisioned Superman’s origin, including all things Kryptonian, in the limited run series Man of Steel. The Bridwell alphabet was abandoned in favor of more geometrically-shaped “letters” that matched the new look and feel of Krypton. These symbols still carried no meaning in and of themselves. It wasn’t until 2000 that DC began using Brewer’s font to depict the Kryptonian language in a way that actually conveyed meaning.

Why Not Create a Full Language?

Brewer's font in the comics

So why doesn’t DC use an actual Kryptonian language in its comics? There are several good reasons:

The Alphabet

A
A
B
B
C
C
D
D
E
E
F
F
G
G
H
H
I
I
J
J
K
K
L
L
M
M
N
N
O
O
P
P
Q
Q
R
R
S
S
T
T
U
U
V
V
W
W
X
X
Y
Y
Z
Z

Note that there is no distinction between upper and lower case letters.

The Numbers

0
0
1
1
2
2
3
3
4
4
5
5
6
6
7
7
8
8
9
9

Punctuation

There are no punctuation marks in the Brewer font, but punctuation marks do output as a space.