Broken Text Generator

Convert your standard text into b͟r͟o͟k͟e͟n͟ text, ready to copy and paste!

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Broken Text Overview

Fracture letters with hairline cracks so words look chipped and unstable: b͟r͟o͟k͟e͟n͟. The layered split strokes (͟ ͞) add fault lines through each glyph, suggesting shattered glass or stressed plastic without losing legibility.

Fracture the baseline for a worn, broken look—each character gains a low double bar that makes letters feel scuffed and separated: brokenb͟r͟o͟k͟e͟n͟, TEXTT͟E͟X͟T͟, 20252͟0͟2͟5͟.

Broken — double low-bar accent under every glyph (x͟)

The map appends the combining mark ͟ beneath each supported letter and digit—literal pattern . The subtle underline fragments the word’s baseline, giving captions a cracked, distressed cadence without changing letter shapes.

Use for

  • Moody labels, error stingers, and dark UI chips.
  • Track titles, chapter tags, and promo slugs that need quiet grit.
  • Short codes or dates where a fractured baseline adds character.

How to shape it

  1. Keep phrases compact (1–6 words) so the broken rhythm stays legible.
  2. ALL-CAPS reads poster-like; mixed case feels more organic.
  3. Add a touch of line-height if descenders feel crowded.

Craft notes

  • Pattern is literal for letters/digits; spaces remain spaces and punctuation passes through as typed.
  • Rendering weight varies by font/OS—preview tight headers and stacked lines.
  • Best used as an accent; long paragraphs of low bars can tire the eye.

Similar tools to explore: Distressed Grunge for scuffed slashes, Ink Bleed for soaked edges, Glitch for signal-tear energy, and Slashed for a clean diagonal cut.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Will every font show the same cracks?

Mark positioning depends on the font, which enhances the organic fracture.

Is it readable for long text?

Best for short titles—heavy cracking on paragraphs can be tiring.

Digits included?

Yes—0–9 receive the same ͟ overlay.

Copy/paste safe?

Yes—this is standard Unicode.

Good use cases?

Error banners, haunted themes, or “under construction” jokes.