Which Chinese font is better in China, Japan and Korea?
Font topic needs some visual elements to show, but it is still a simple text platform, and it is very laborious to discuss. People who have studied fonts rarely ask questions, because this is not a field full of doubts and uncertainties. Like art appreciation, it is more important to observe and draw your own opinions than to ask questions. Then ask questions related to fonts, or answer such questions, usually need a lot of experience to support. There are very few experienced people, who are usually unwilling to give unclear and unqualified answers, preferring not to answer. Who is the better font for Chinese characters in different places? This is a question of little significance. In terms of production quality, whoever has more money, who can give font designers more wealth and higher social status, can make better quality fonts. If that's what you said, then Japanese fonts are naturally the best. However, the use of Chinese fonts has regional characteristics, and fonts that conform to local font habits are usually better in the eyes of local people. A simplified Chinese character may look beautiful to A who lives in Chinese mainland, but to B who lives in Hongkong, it may be a residual Chinese character with no arms and legs. It's unhealthy and far from beautiful. But for Japanese C, this simplification method is the same as the new Japanese font, but the writing is a bit strange, so it is just so-so. So we will make some fonts according to the customs of several regions. From this point of view, it doesn't matter whether the font is excellent or not, what matters is whether it is applicable. Whether the text should be serif or sans serif: this is a matter of personal preference and is greatly influenced by physical conditions. We can't generalize and think that sans serif is better. How is your experiment going? N I'd rather use cleartype in windows than Microsoft Yahei. But on Mac, I usually choose Hiragino Sans GB or Lihei. Everyone can have their own preferences, there is no standard here.